But more extensive observation has developed the fact that the frequency of abscess of the liver in connection with dysentery is a peculiarity of tropical climates. In the temperate and colder regions of the North this complication is not by any means so frequent. Frerichs declares that of 16 observations collected by Louis and Andral, "ulcers were present in only 3, and in 2 of these cases the ulcers were tubercular; of his own 8 cases, there was intestinal affection in none." Gluck believes that the liver is more prone to show suppuration when already predisposed to it by a preceding amyloid or cirrhotic change of malarial origin. Eichhorst calls attention to the well-known fact that abscess of the liver is especially a disease of the tropics independently of dysentery, and the frequency of its occurrence here may be a mere coincidence. But it must be remembered that opportunity for post-mortem examination, upon the results of which these statistics are based, does not occur in the great majority of cases of dysentery, and abscess of the liver is very often overlooked. Thus, Schneider cites cases where persons with abscess of the liver of the size of the head were considered simulants up to twenty-four hours before death. Since the diagnosis of hepatic abscess has been made so easy by aspiration, cases begin to multiply; and it is doubtless the experience of most practitioners, in the temperate zone at least, that the decided majority of cases of hepatic abscess acknowledge an existing or previous attack of dysentery. Certainly, few authors would now venture to subscribe to the view of Annesley, that the abscess of the liver was the primary malady and was the cause of the dysentery.
SYMPTOMATOLOGY.—Dysentery, as stated, begins, as a rule, with the general signs of a gastro-intestinal catarrh. So frequent is this mode of inception, and so few are the exceptions, that it is impossible to resist the conclusion that the disease is caused by the introduction of a noxious element into the alimentary canal. The irritation thus induced begins at the stomach, and is rapidly propagated throughout the whole tract of the intestine. In the course of a few days the cause of the disease becomes strictly localized to the large intestine, whose greater capacity and more sluggish movement fit it for the easier reception and longer retention of noxious matter.
But specific dysentery and the more intense forms of catarrhal dysentery occasionally exhibit distinctive symptoms from the start, and in rarer cases the disease is suddenly announced with such tempestuous signs as to excite the suspicion of poisoning. Thus, a case (one of five lighter cases) is reported from the Rudolfstiftung in Vienna (1878) where the disease closely simulated Asiatic cholera, and where it rapidly ran a fatal course, in spite of laudanum, soda-water, ice pills, mustard plasters, injections of amyl nitrite, camphor, and ether, and faradization of the phrenic nerve to stimulate the failing respiration. Finger reports similar cases from the hospital at Prague.
Ordinarily, the peculiar pains of dysentery first proclaim the character of the disease. The severe grinding, twisting pains, tormina, are more or less localized in the course of the colon, and hence surround or traverse the entire abdomen, the pains at the epigastrium being due to spasmodic contractions of the transverse colon. The patient in vain adopts various postures in relief or sits with his hands firmly compressing the abdominal walls. The tormina are more or less intermittent or remittent, and are usually experienced in greatest severity toward evening. During their acme the face wears the aspect of the intense suffering, which is expressed in outcries and groans. At the same time there is upon pressure over the whole abdomen more or less tenderness, which soon comes to be especially localized at the cæcum or sigmoid flexure.
The tenesmus (cupiditas egerendi) is a more distressing, and certainly more distinctive, sign of dysentery. It is the feeling of heavy weight or oppression, of the presence of a foreign body in the rectum, which demands instant relief. At the same time intense heat is felt in the rectum, which the patient likens sometimes to the passage of a red-hot iron. The desire of evacuation becomes as frequent as urgent. In well-marked cases the patient sits at stool half an hour or an hour at a time, straining until faint and exhausted, leaving the commode with reluctance, only immediately or very soon to use it again.
Great depression is felt at the stomach at the same time, with nausea, occasionally with vomiting; and strangury, with the discharge of only a few drops of scalding urine or blood from the bladder, adds additional suffering to the disease. Retraction of the testicle and prolapsus ani, especially in children, are prone to occur in severe cases.
But neither the pain nor the prostration is so characteristic of dysentery as the stools, which, though of very varied nature, are nevertheless distinctive. After the discharge of the intestinal contents the first evacuations consist of mucus in the form of glairy, stringy matter, like the white of an egg, expressed as the result of the violent efforts at straining. The mucus may be pure or tinged with blood, but it is usually very scant in quantity, and stands in this regard in marked contrast with the violence of the efforts to secure its extrusion. It is the frequency of its discharge which constitutes an especial distress. Twenty to forty, even two hundred, times in the twenty-four hours the patient must go to stool. In the worst cases the patient sits at stool or lies upon the bed-pan the most of the day.
The mucus is sooner or later mingled with pus or stained with blood. The presence of pus by no means necessarily implies the existence of ulceration, as the apparently pure mucus always shows occasional white blood-corpuscles under the microscope, and even extensive suppurations occur without apparent solutions of continuity.
The presence of blood is equally characteristic of dysenteric stools. Usually it is intimately commingled with the mucus or pus or forms the chief element of the copious so-called bilious discharge. The evacuation of pure blood indicates erosion of vessels low in the colon, often in the rectum itself, though enormous quantities of blood are sometimes voided from unbroken surfaces. Thus Lécard reports the case of a soldier who "while sitting restless at stool lost one and a half quarts of blood." The patient died on the fifth day of the disease, and at the autopsy there was found "apoplectiform congestion from the ileo-cæcal valve to the anus, but no ulcers anywhere, nor any broken vessels."
Besides the mucus, pus, and blood, the dysenteric stools contain the sloughs which have been torn off by violent peristalsis in cases of the diphtheritic form. Usually they are separated in shreds and fragments, but occasionally large sheets, even casts of a section of the colon, are voided en masse. These were the cases considered by the older authors to be detachments of the mucous membrane itself. As already observed, these fragments consist for the most part of inspissated mucus, pus, blood, and tissue-débris; but there is no doubt that in some cases partially necrosed mucosa also enters into their construction. One enormous tubular cast fourteen inches long, preserved in our Army Medical Museum, was found to be "composed of pseudo-membranous lymph in which no traces of the structure of the mucous membrane could be detected" (Woodward).