11 Niemeyer's Text-book of Practical Med., vol. ii. p. 741.
The leading points in the physiognomies of each of these types were admirably shown in the composite photographs exhibited by Dr. Mohamed at the last International Congress in England. By some special process a composite photograph of many faces was, as it were, condensed into a single picture, in which all that is common remains, all that is individual disappears. And although Mohamed's pictures were all of phthisical patients, it must be admitted that the two types of coarse struma and sanguine struma were strikingly illustrated, and were very suggestive of Canstatt's descriptions as given above. But it must be borne in mind that a large number of the strumous belong strictly to neither of these types, but rather to a medium between the two. "Such a type would include what is known as pretty struma. The general features of the individuals so termed belong to the so-called phlegmatic type, but the coarseness of the features is toned down; the lips would be called full, not tumid; and a coarse flabbiness would subside into a pretty, plump condition of the body. The limbs, if not actually graceful, are at least prettily rounded. The skin may not be thin and fine, but it is soft, white, and clear. The general expression is not absolutely apathetic, but would be termed gentle and eminently feminine. Excellent representations of this type of pretty struma were also shown in the photographic series above mentioned."12
12 Treves, Scrofula and its Gland Diseases, p. 84.
This matter of physiognomy of the scrofulous has this much at least of practical importance—viz. that to the sanguine or erethistic type belong those cases that show distinct heredity, while the phlegmatic or torpid is usually the type assumed in the acquired forms. While there are doubtless numerous exceptions, it will generally be found that scrofula in the rich assumes the first, and in the poor the second, of these forms. It has been asserted that the erethistic form is more apt to develop tuberculosis or phthisis; and to a certain extent this is doubtless true, but the torpid are by no means exempt from this grave accident. The first are undeniably more liable to the more severe and fatal forms of the disease, which run a more rapid course and are less amenable to treatment, while in the second phthisis is more apt to be chronic and incomplete recoveries are by no means rare. The first form is said to be more frequent in women, while the second is more frequent in males; and this accords with my own observation and experience.
There are certain features more or less peculiar to scrofula, besides those appertaining to the general physiognomy already discussed, which it may be well to call attention to, since these may aid us in detecting the scrofulous diathesis even before the grosser manifestations have declared themselves.
Allusion has already been made to the defective blood-vascular capillary network in the scrofulous as a necessary consequence of the excessive predominance of lymph-spaces and lymphatic vessels. Indeed, there can scarcely be a doubt that the slowness of evolution of various pathological processes, their chronicity, and the absence of tendency to resolution and cure of inflammatory lesions, so prominent a feature in all scrofulous manifestations, is due to this very condition. It is especially in the coarser type of struma that these defects in the circulation are most conspicuous. In these the pulse is often below the average, soft, and wanting in vigor. The cheeks and limbs often assume a bluish and mottled aspect, due perhaps to a tendency to stagnation of the blood in exposed parts. The extremities appear swollen as if from cold, and in the winter generally appear chapped. They are particularly liable to chilblains, which persist far into the summer and often take on a very unhealthy action. This last feature is so common as to constitute an important symptom in scrofula. These defects in the circulation also probably explain the frequent catarrhs and eczemas with which such persons are affected, and account also for their intractableness as well as the unwholesome character of their wounds.
For the same reason (deficient circulation) the temperature is generally found to be a little lower in the coarsely strumous than in healthy children, and even in their fevers a very high temperature is rarely met with. Acute sthenic inflammations are rarely seen, and hence these persons seldom have acute croupous pneumonias; it is rather the catarrhal variety, and of this the subacute and chronic forms, which they suffer from.
Opinions are completely at variance as to the influence of the scrofulous habit in delaying or hastening menstruation. Lugol referred to the frequency of dysmenorrhoea among the strumous, and there is no doubt that the scrofulous as a rule often suffer from suppressed or scanty menstruation. But it is improbable that the diathesis exerts any influence whatever in determining the period of puberty in either sex.
We have already stated our belief that the strumous are neither more intelligent nor stupid mentally than other people. An exception ought perhaps to be made to this in the case of the exaggerated type of the coarsely strumous. In these extreme cases we must confess that we have generally found associated great slowness and dulness of the mental faculties. If great intelligence and precocity are sometimes met with, it is only in the erethistic or pretty struma, who, because it is the delicate one of the family, is petted, has more notice taken of it, and afforded every facility for the development of the points that make up the precocious infant. The prettiness of these children, moreover, attracts more attention to them than to other children or than the bulk of the sickly would receive.
In young scrofulous children we often observe a considerable amount of close-lying downy hair upon the forehead, more abundant upon the sides of the forehead. Upon the arms and back from the occiput to below the shoulders also a like condition is often seen. Later the eyelashes appear thicker and longer, and the eyebrows more abundant, coarser, and longer, than in the non-scrofulous. The color of these is also apt to be darker than the rest of the hair.