42 The yearly occurrence of typhoid fever and diarrhoea at seashore hotels shows that there is great danger in crowding persons together and saturating the soil with the excreta. In the summer of 1882 in a boarding-house in the mountains of Maryland, where the temperature was never above 75°, there were three fatal cases of diarrhoea in children, and several others of diarrhoea and dysentery which recovered.

43 The drinking-water supplying a country boarding-house visited by the writer passed through iron pipes imbedded in the manure-heap of a barnyard.

The selection of a plan of treatment for intestinal catarrh will depend upon the nature and cause of the symptoms. The diagnosis of the case is incomplete and the treatment irrational until the indications furnished by etiology have been obtained.

If cold has been the exciting cause, the patient should be confined to bed. In the beginning a full dose of pilocarpin, hypodermically,44 or of the fluid extract of jaborandi by the mouth, may cause a powerful diversion from the bowel to the skin. A hot-water or vapor bath has the same object in view. Hot fomentations or mustard poultices can be next applied to the abdomen. This should be succeeded by a febrifuge mixture containing the tincture of aconite-root, to which an opiate (the deodorized tincture of opium or morphia) is to be added if there is much pain or diarrhoea. A hypodermic injection of morphia given on the first day of the attack immediately after a hot bath will give a quiet night and diminish the intensity of the illness. The subsequent treatment is that common to all the acute forms.

44 Atropia can be given with pilocarpin to diminish its effect on the heart; atropia is the antidote for pilocarpin. (See Schuk, Centralb. f. d. med. Wissen., Bd. 20, 1882, p. 357; also, Frohnmüller, Med.-Chir. Centralb., July 14, 1882.)

If summer heat has been the cause in adults or children, artificial cooling of the temperature of the room by the evaporation of ice-water or by one of the refrigerating machines yet to be perfected meet the indication. If there is much body-heat (thermic fever), cold sponging, the application of cold to the head, or the giving of pounded ice to satisfy the intense thirst, are all advisable. Such cases are benefited by a change of climate when the acute symptoms subside. The form of diarrhoea due to malaria is to be treated by quinia and change of air to a more healthful climate. Iron, with quinia or arsenic, is needed in obstinate cases.

Intestinal catarrh which proceeds from the presence of undigested food or hard fecal lumps in the bowel is benefited by early removal of the irritating cause. It is not often that substances of this kind are retained when the stools are large and frequent. The peristalsis is here as active as it need be, and no good, but only harm, can come from over-stimulating the contractile muscles. In those instances where there is a distinct history of the taking of indigestible food, especially fruit with seeds or skins, and where the efforts at stool are frequent, ineffectual, and accompanied by colic and borborygmi, or where scybalæ are found floating in the fluid passed, a large enema of warm water given slowly will excite the bowel to successful expulsive efforts. If this does not give a certain amount of prompt relief, a moderate dose of castor oil, calomel, Rochelle or Epsom salts ought to be prescribed, and repeated after some hours until a free fluid or semi-fluid stool results; one or two doses will usually suffice. If the inflammation is localized in the cæcum (typhlitis), as indicated by local pain, tenderness on pressure in the right iliac or right lumbar regions, constipation, flexing of the right thigh on the trunk, and vomiting, a purgative should not be given, nor should prolonged efforts be made to empty the bowel by injection through long rectal tubes. If there is doubt as to whether typhlitis or undigested food and fecal impaction is the cause of the local pain, it is better to err on the safe side, and not to give a purgative unless the case is seen in the onset before the more pronounced symptoms appear; then calomel or castor oil may be tried once, but not repeated in case of failure.

As the diarrhoea of Bright's disease is salutary, no effort should be made to arrest it. Its periodical recurrence prolongs life. In tuberculosis the special character of the diarrhoea must be considered, and every effort must be made to control it. In the eruptive fevers an early diarrhoea, as in scarlet fever, does harm; it delays or prevents the normal development of the eruption. In the later stages it is of service sometimes, as in measles, when it leads to a rapid fall of temperature. The course of action depends upon the nature of the specific disease and upon the time of the appearance of diarrhoea.

There are certain principles, founded on the knowledge derived from pathological study and from the experience of the past in the treatment of intestinal catarrh, which guide us to a treatment which is more or less rational in all cases.

Rest is essential to the cure of the inflamed intestine, but absolute inertia of the bowel is undesirable, even injurious. The retention of fluids, transuded serum, bile, intestinal juices, and partly-altered food is hurtful. Decomposition sets in and gas is developed, which by distending the bowel causes great suffering and increases the inflammation. The movements of the intestine are not entirely under control; the patient must be fed; digestion and assimilation involve the activity of inflamed parts. The stomach can be made to do most of the work, but the sympathy of action is so close between the stomach and intestines that one cannot function without the other being excited into activity.