HYPERTROPHIC STENOSIS OF THE PYLORUS.

The various causes of stenosis of the pylorus have already been mentioned under DILATATION OF THE STOMACH, and the most important of these causes have received full consideration in connection with ULCER and with CANCER OF THE STOMACH.

Only one of the varieties of pyloric stenosis can claim consideration as an independent disease. This variety is the so-called hypertrophic stenosis of the pylorus (Lebert) or fibroid degeneration of the pylorus (Habershon12). Under the name of hypertrophic stenosis have been described cases in which the stenosis was due to hypertrophy of only one of the coats of the stomach, usually either the submucous or the muscular coat, sometimes only the mucous coat. In most cases, however, all of the coats of the stomach are involved, and the lesion is similar to that of cirrhosis of the stomach, but it is confined to the pylorus or to the pyloric region. In such cases there is new growth of fibrous tissue, most marked in the submucous coat, and hypertrophy of the muscular coat. The appearance of the pylorus in some instances of hypertrophic stenosis has been not inappropriately compared to that of the cervix uteri.

12 Habershon, On Diseases of the Abdomen, London, 1862; Lebert, Die Krankh. d. Magens, Tübingen, 1878; Nauwerk, Deutsches Arch. f. klin. Med., Bd. 21, 1878.

In the majority of cases the change here described is the result of cicatrization of a gastric ulcer, and some believe that all cases of so-called hypertrophic stenosis or fibroid degeneration of the pylorus are referable to ulcer, although it may be very difficult to discover the cicatrix of the ulcer. It is certainly not always possible to detect either ulcer or cicatrix, so that it seems proper to regard the hypertrophic stenosis in such cases as constituting an independent affection.

The symptoms are those of dilatation of the stomach, sometimes preceded by evidences of chronic catarrhal gastritis. The thickened pylorus can sometimes be felt during life as a small, cylindrical, usually movable tumor, either stationary in progress or of very slow growth.

In most cases the diagnosis of organic stenosis of the pylorus can be made. Cancer may sometimes be excluded by the long duration of the symptoms and the stationary character of the tumor if a tumor can be felt. The exclusion of ulcer is more difficult and hardly possible, for ulcer may have existed without producing characteristic symptoms.

The prognosis and treatment have been considered under DILATATION OF THE STOMACH.