11 J. Stevenson, "Medical Notes from Ceylon," Edin. Med. Journ., Feb., 1862, p. 693.
The irritant and caustic poisons, as mineral acids, caustic alkalies, corrosive sublimate, arsenic, oxalic acid, tartar emetic, and carbolic acid, kindle an intense inflammation of the mucous membrane of the stomach, duodenum, and of the lower portion of the intestinal canal. Softening of the coats of the intestines from corrosion, with perforation, is not an infrequent result.
Drastic purgatives act as irritant poisons in producing acute hyperæmia of the mucous coat with excessive transudation of serum; or, in other words, an acute catarrh. A discharge of vitiated bile or an excess of bile is given by recent12 as well as by older writers as a provoking cause of diarrhoea. The proper relationship is the reverse of this: an intestinal catarrh the result of irritant action upon the mucous surface entails a more active outflow of bile, just as some cathartics by irritating the duodenum excite the gall-bladder to empty itself.13 Impacted fecal masses are direct irritants, exciting inflammation (typhlitis, dysentery); putrefactive changes in long-retained fecal collections have an additional power of irritation. Foreign bodies accidentally or purposely swallowed, intestinal parasites, the pus from an abscess which bursts into the intestine, likewise are excitants of disease. Tubercle nodules, typhoid ulcers, cancer, or other neoplasms in the wall are surrounded by areas of inflammation.
12 Roberts, Th. and Pract. Medicine, Am. ed., Philada., 1880, p. 160.
13 "The propositions which are the foundation of the whole theory that bile can cause diarrhoea, and that its absence leads to costiveness, cannot be looked upon as proved" (J. Wickham Legg, On the Bile, Jaundice, and Bilious Diseases, New York, 1880, p. 661).
Alcohol taken in excess, as in a debauch, leads to acute gastro-intestinal catarrh. The stomach symptoms are the earliest to develop and are the most prominent. Habitual alcoholic indulgence is a more common source of chronic than of acute intestinal catarrh.
The influence of unwholesome drinking-water as a cause of diarrhoea has been carefully examined by Woodward.14 Turbid or muddy water holding inorganic matters in suspension, he concludes from the evidence, is not a source of disease, and the injurious effects of such waters have been grossly exaggerated. Water containing inorganic substances in solution produce diarrhoea, and are purgative if the dissolved matters have purgative properties. Limestone-water may produce temporary disturbance of the bowels, but is wholesome. Carbonate and sulphate of lime and magnesium in solution are more cathartic, but not as much so as selenitic waters which contain an excess of sulphate of lime. The salts of sodium and potassium in the waters of Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah are still more liable to produce diarrhoea.
14 Med. and Surg. History of the War, Part 2, Medical Volume, p. 599 et seq.
Water contaminated with organic matters of vegetable origin, which are found in states of decomposition in marshes and stagnant pools, does not, in the opinion of Woodward and Parkes, have very great influence in the production of diarrhoea or dysentery. Impurities from decomposition of animal matters are unhealthful. This is especially true of water impregnated with soakage from privies and sewers; and yet epidemics of diarrhoea cannot as often be clearly traced to this source as can outbreaks of typhoid fever. Parkes says water contaminated with three to ten grains per gallon of putrescent animal matter may be hurtful.
Contusions and injuries of the bowel by sudden pressure or shock to the abdominal wall may lead to intestinal inflammation. The large intestine is more exposed from its size and position to such injuries. Pressure upon the bowel by a tumor, as an enlarged or retroverted uterus, may cause diarrhoea, the source of which may be overlooked. Early-morning diarrhoea from a displaced womb is of frequent occurrence.