30 Clinical Medicine, Philada., 1879, p. 280.
31 Guy's Hospital Gazette, Sept., 1878, p. 98 et seq.
32 Maladies des Enfants, Paris, 1861, tome i. p. 748.
III. Acute Colitis.—Fifty years ago colitis was synonymous with enteritis, and not with dysentery, as at a more recent date.33 The older signification expressed the fact that inflammation in the colon is essential to diarrhoea. Later the term was used synonymously with dysentery.34
33 Journal général de Médecine, Paris, 1825, t. xci. p. 18.
34 Tweedie, System of the Practice of Medicine, 1841.
The colon is a conducting tube; the contents are composed of matters unabsorbed in the small intestines. At first the mass entering the colon is fluid, but by the gradual absorption of its watery part it approaches solidity. The discharge from the rectum of a fluid shows that the propulsion through the large intestine is so rapid that the process of drying does not take place, or that from inflammation of the colon there is an excess of fluid transudation from the intestinal wall. The superficial position of the colon, its great size and length, expose it to the action of external cold, to blows, etc.
In catarrh limited to the colon there are essentially the same symptoms as in ileo-colitis, inasmuch as the inflammation of the colon gives to that form its characteristic features—borborygmi, diarrhoea, and tympanites. When the disease in the colon preponderates or exists alone, the pain and tenderness are more superficial and confined to the line of the large intestine. The distended colon projects and the abdominal swelling is not so uniform. If the attack is subacute or mild, the stools contain normal feces mixed with a great deal of mucus; when the inflammation is in the sigmoid flexure, pure mucus is passed. Blood mixed with mucus and tenesmus accompany inflammation low down. Blood may, however, come from intense inflammation of the ascending and transverse colon without disease of the lower bowel.35
35 In a case seen by the writer of colitis terminating fatally from perforation of the transverse colon this point was illustrated. A woman aged fifty was taken with diarrhoea in August, 1873. In November the symptoms became worse: tongue dry and red; abdominal pain; tympanites; frequent stools, ten to seventeen in twenty-four hours; quantity large, of a yellow or brownish-red color with floating flakes. General symptoms grew worse; blood in stools from time to time. November 24, sudden cessation of discharges from the bowels, and the following day sudden collapse and death. Autopsy: Descending colon and sigmoid flexure comparatively healthy. Transverse colon adherent to stomach; deposits of lymph on colon and small intestines; fluid and feces in the peritoneal cavity. The mucous membrane of the ascending and transverse colon in a state of black pulpy disintegration. In the transverse colon the walls were thinned by ulceration and easily torn; gangrenous appearance of mucous coat; perforation of the colon wall below greater curvature of the stomach.
IV. Proctitis.—The rectum may be the seat of simple catarrh, which differs in its symptoms from catarrh of other portions of the canal. By many this form is called simple, non-infective dysentery. But as it is a form of intestinal catarrh, it is right that it should be considered in connection with colitis. The first indication of its onset is a frequent desire to go to stool, with an unsatisfied feeling after each effort. Normal fecal matter is first expelled in solid form, coated with mucus which may be streaked with blood. Soon, however, the discharges consist of jelly-like mucus, alone or mixed with blood. A small quantity of this is passed with tenesmus at short intervals. The patient complains of a burning feeling in the rectum and a constant and irresistible desire to strain. The same spasmodic contraction may involve the bladder.