The urine is diminished and high-colored. Very little disturbance of the nervous system is seen except in young and old patients; some headache and restlessness are all that may be observed. Moderate delirium at night accompanies very acute attacks. In children convulsions are not unusual in the onset and at the end of the attack. In the aged exhaustion from the illness soon lapses into stupor or coma.

Paraplegia and contraction of the muscles of the extremities are referred by some observers to gastro-intestinal inflammation.25

25 Potain, Le Praticien, Paris, 1879-80, p. 88.

In uncomplicated mild cases of intestinal catarrh there is a movement toward recovery after a few days' illness. The stools become less frequent, smaller, and more consistent. In a week to ten days the tongue cleans, the thirst ceases, the appetite returns, the tympanites and pain diminish. The fever declines, and ceases before the diarrhoea is completely arrested. There are always more or less emaciation and loss of strength from the fever and arrest of nutrition. The liability to relapse is great, and the patient by indiscretions reproduces the same symptoms, thus prolonging the attack for several weeks. Acute intestinal catarrh may pass into the chronic form by a disappearance of fever and amelioration of all the abdominal symptoms. The patient begins to take solid food, gains strength and flesh, but complete recovery does not come. The diarrhoea recurs at variable intervals as the result of indulgences in a mixed diet, over-exercise, or exposure to cold, and in time we have some degree of chronic catarrh permanently established.

Very mild cases may be prolonged by the neglect of the patient to consider his painless diarrhoea of sufficient moment to need attention.

In inflammation of the more intense kind the picture is somewhat different. The prodromes are longer and the general symptoms more severe. Restlessness, a sense of prostration, delirium, and high fever mark the early stages and continue for a longer time. The patient loses flesh and strength quickly. The features express anxiety and illness, the skin is hot and dry, and the thirst great. Vomiting is repeated. Borborygmi, the tension of the abdomen, pain, and sensibility to pressure are all intensified. The stools are at first yellow and thin, but change much from day to day. They may be green or very thin and dark or grayish, and are sometimes very offensive in odor. Blood and mucus may be seen in them, being slimy or grumous and bloody. When the patient is very weak the discharges are involuntary; the tongue is coated white, with bright red tip and edges, and is often dry.

The severer forms last from three to six weeks. After a tedious period of alternate improvement and relapse the illness becomes chronic or the patient dies from asthenia, perforation and peritonitis, or some other complication.

In the most intense varieties which find examples among Europeans and Americans in intertropical countries, or result from acute mineral poisoning and from rapidly-progressing cases of acute ulceration of the intestinal wall, especially in children, there is a sharper and more violent invasion. The strength is reduced in a very short time, and there is rapid emaciation; the features assume an anxious expression; the complexion is leaden or livid; the skin is cold and clammy; the pulse is small, weak, and rapid; the breath comes quick and short, and is frequently complicated with hiccough. In the early stages vomiting occurs, due to a concurrent gastritis; in cases of poisoning vomiting is incessant.

The pain in the abdomen is intense, and less paroxysmal than in other forms. The abdomen is tympanitic and excessively tender to the touch, and the knees are drawn up to relieve the tension of the abdominal muscles. Thin, black, or reddish stools are passed every few moments. As the attack progresses the urine is suppressed, the voice becomes whispering, and collapse is developed. This is marked by cold extremities, dyspnoea, feeble and finally imperceptible pulse. Death may end the scene in a few hours or the patient may rally and recover slowly.

Choleriform diarrhoea occurs chiefly in children during hot weather.