b. Malaria. Here we may distinguish, first, periodical malarial hemorrhages from the stomach which are cured by quinia; second, pernicious gastric malarial fever, of very grave prognosis; and third, hemorrhages in malarial cachexia due to extreme anæmia. Cases which have been described as malaria with scorbutic complications belong mostly to the last variety. Mention has already been made of gastric hemorrhages attributed to malarial pigmentation of the liver.
c. Profound Anæmias. The most important affections in this category are progressive pernicious anæmia, leucocythæmia, and pseudo-leucocythæmia, including the so-called splenic anæmia.
d. Cholæmia. The hemorrhage is attributed to dissolution of the blood-corpuscles by the action of the biliary salts.
Gastric hemorrhage is a rare event in Bright's disease, occurring more especially with small kidneys. In one such case I found that the fatal hemorrhage was due to the bursting of a miliary aneurism of a small artery in the submucous coat. Probably in all similar cases the hemorrhage is referable to disease of the vascular walls.
9. Neuropathic Conditions.—Although ecchymoses in the mucous membrane of the stomach can be experimentally produced by injury of various parts of the brain and spinal cord, there is no proof that gastric hemorrhage which is of any clinical importance is referable to structural diseases of the nervous system. The occasional occurrence of gastric hemorrhage in progressive paralysis of the insane, in tuberculous meningitis, in epilepsy, is to be attributed to other causes.
In lack of a better explanation, however, the gastric hemorrhages which have been occasionally observed in hysterical women may be classified here. These constitute not the least important class of gastric hemorrhages. The hemorrhages from the stomach in chlorosis belong partly here and partly to anæmia.
10. Melæna Neonatorum.—Although in some cases ulcers have been found in the stomach or duodenum, and in others a general hemorrhagic diathesis exists, it must be said that the etiology of this grave disease is still very obscure.
11. Bursting of Aneurisms or of Abscesses from without into the Stomach.
12. Idiopathic Causes.—Under this unsatisfactory designation are included cases which are aptly described by Flint1 in the following words: "Hemorrhage sometimes occurs from the stomach, as from the bronchial tubes, the Schneiderian membrane, and in other situations, without any apparent pathological connections, neither following nor preceding any appreciable morbid conditions. It is then to be considered as idiopathic." A person in apparent health has suddenly a hemorrhage, often profuse, from the stomach, which is followed only by symptoms immediately referable to the hemorrhage. The hemorrhage is naturally the source of great anxiety. Ulcer or cancer of the stomach or some other grave disease is usually suspected. But the patient develops no further symptoms, and often never has another hemorrhage. Whatever hypotheses one may construct for these cases of so-called idiopathic hemorrhage, the recognition of the clinical fact of their occurrence is important.
1 Austin Flint, A Treatise on the Principles and Practice of Medicine, 5th ed., p. 513, Philada., 1881.