The treatment of puerperal septicæmia, although requiring the application of the same principles as any other form of this disease, may be briefly described as follows: The womb should be maintained in a firmly-contracted state by the proper use of ergot, even as a prophylactic measure, and also during the whole course of the disease; the uterus and vagina should be kept in an aseptic condition by the efficient use of antiseptics; sulphate of quinia should be given in large doses, and repeated as often as may be necessary in order to lower the temperature; and morphia or some form of opium should be employed for the relief of the pain.
PUERPERAL FEVER.
BY WILLIAM T. LUSK, M.D.
DEFINITION.—Puerperal fever is an infectious disease, due, as a rule, to the septic inoculation of the wounds which result from the separation of the decidua and the passage of the child through the genital canal in the act of parturition.
To maintain this definition it is, however, necessary to group by themselves cases of childbed fever dependent upon causes which are operative in the non-puerperal condition, though the latter imparts to these causes oftentimes an exceptional activity and virulence. In this category are to be placed especially scarlatina, typhus, typhoid, and malarial fevers. It is to be borne in mind that the zymotic fevers may provoke in the puerperal woman the same inflammatory lesions commonly associated with puerperal fever.1 This is in accordance with the well-known surgical experience that a febrile paroxysm from any cause exerts an unfavorable influence upon a wounded surface.
1 Hervieux, Traité clinique et pratique des maladies puerperales, pp. 1073 et seq.
Like all brief statements, the writer is well aware that the foregoing definition is necessarily imperfect, and stands in need of further limitations to meet the requirements of exactness. Exceptions, however, either apparent or real, will be noted hereafter in their proper connections.