Cirrhosis of the stomach, as well as cancer, ulcer, and most other chronic structural diseases of this organ, is usually associated with chronic catarrhal gastritis. There is, however, no proof of the prevalent idea that chronic catarrhal gastritis is the cause of the enormous new growth of fibrous tissue which characterizes typical cases of this disease.

SYMPTOMATOLOGY AND DIAGNOSIS.—The symptoms of cirrhosis of the stomach are not sufficiently characteristic to warrant a positive diagnosis. Sometimes the disease pursues a latent course. Like cancer of the stomach, it may put on various disguises. Thus, in a case of cirrhosis of the stomach reported by Nothnägel8 the symptoms were typically those of progressive pernicious anæmia. Association with ascites or with chronic peritonitis may lead to a false diagnosis. Thus, in one of the cases which I examined after death, and in which there was chronic peritonitis with abundant fluid exudation, the disease during life was diagnosticated as cirrhosis of the liver. Most frequently, however, cirrhosis of the stomach is mistaken for gastric cancer, from which, in fact, it can rarely be positively diagnosticated.

8 Deutsches Arch. f. kl. Med., Bd. 24, p. 353.

The symptoms are usually those of chronic dyspepsia, which sooner or later assumes a severity which leads to the diagnosis of some grave structural disease of the stomach, usually of cancer.

Indigestion, loss of appetite, oppression in the epigastrium, vomiting, are the common but in no way characteristic symptoms of cirrhosis of the stomach. There may be severe gastralgia, but in general the disease is less painful than either ulcer or cancer of the stomach. The inability to take more than a small quantity of food or of drink at a time, with the sense of fulness which even this small quantity occasions, has been considered somewhat characteristic of cirrhosis of the stomach, but this symptom is too inconstant, and occurs in too many other affections of the stomach, to be of much service in diagnosis. The symptoms of dyspepsia are often of much longer duration than in cancer, existing sometimes for many years (up to fifteen years), but on the other hand there have been cases in which the clinical history of gastric cirrhosis was as rapid in its progress as cancer. Moreover, cancer may be preceded by dyspeptic symptoms of long duration, but long duration is the exception with cancer and the rule with cirrhosis of the stomach.

As the disease progresses the patient loses flesh and strength, and usually dies in a condition of marasmus. Blood is rarely present in the vomit, but in a few cases the vomiting of coffee-ground material has been noted.

By physical examination sometimes a tumor in the region of the stomach can be felt. Under favorable circumstances it can sometimes be determined that this tumor is smooth, elastic, tympanitic on percussion, and presents more or less distinctly the contours of the stomach. By administering effervescing powder it may be possible to obtain further evidence that the tumor corresponds in its form to the stomach. The diagnosis of contraction of the cavity of the stomach is not easy. Some information may be afforded by noting the length to which the inflexible stomach-tube can be passed. The quantity of water which can be poured into the stomach until it begins to run out of the stomach-tube may also bring some confirmatory evidence as to the existence of contraction of the stomach.

Even should the physical signs suffice to determine that the tumor is the thickened and contracted stomach, still cancer cannot be excluded, for this also may grow diffusely in the gastric walls and may cause contraction of the cavity of the stomach. With our present means of diagnosis, therefore, the most which can be said is, that a special combination of favorable circumstances may render probable the diagnosis of cirrhosis of the stomach, but a positive diagnosis is impossible.

MORBID ANATOMY.—In most cases of cirrhosis of the stomach the stomach is contracted. The cavity of the stomach has been found not larger than would suffice to contain a hen's egg, but such extreme contraction is very rare. When the stomach in this disease is found dilated, either the thickening involves only or chiefly the walls of the pyloric portion, or the morbid process probably began there and was followed by dilatation.

In typical cases the walls of the entire stomach are thickened, but frequently the thickening is most marked in the pyloric region. The walls may measure an inch and even more in thickness. The thickened walls are dense and firm, so that often upon incision the stomach does not collapse.