There still remains to be mentioned the boiled-sago or frogs'-spawn matter whose origin has given rise to such a curious mistake. Not infrequently these vitreous-looking bodies compose the bulk of the sediment in the stools of dysentery, and even some of our modern authors, unacquainted with the more searching investigations of Virchow, have regarded them as expressed contents of intestinal follicles. Virchow found that under the application of iodine they always assumed a blue color, whereupon he ironically remarks that the sago-like mucus is really mucus-like sago. They are simply granules of starch ingested as food, to remain partially or wholly undigested.
The scybalæ, the composite matter known as the lotura carnea, and the micro-organisms found in the stools have already received mention elsewhere.
Although the stools of dysentery are scant, as a rule, they are so frequent as to discharge during the entire twenty-four hours a very large quantity of albuminous matter. Oesterlen has made the curious calculation to show that the mean daily loss of albuminates in dysentery of moderate intensity is from 50 to 60 grammes during the first fourteen days, and on an average about 20 grammes during the next eight days. The total loss experienced in an attack of three weeks' duration thus amounts to about 1000 grammes—in rough figures, two pounds avoirdupois. The rapidity with which emaciation, hydrops, and marasmus occur in severe cases is thus easily accounted for. Nägele speaks of cases where patients were reduced to skeletons in eight to fourteen days, so that the convalescence extended over six weeks to eight months.
The alteration in the character of the secretion in dysentery is not confined to the mucous membrane of the large intestine. On the contrary, all the digestive juices are changed, in some cases entirely checked. In the graver cases the saliva takes on an acid reaction and loses its glycogenic properties; the gastric juice in the same cases becomes alkaline and loses its peptonizing properties; while the secretion of the bile is wholly arrested. Uffelmann, who had the rare opportunity of studying the secretion of bile in a case of biliary fistula, relates that during an attack of dysentery the bile ceased entirely to flow, and only began to show itself again, at first greenish, then greenish-brown, finally brown, during the process of resolution on the ninth day of the disease. The anorexia, nausea, and vomiting which so often mark the access or attend the course of dysentery find thus easy explanation.
Should the disease continue, the general strength of the patient becomes so profoundly reduced as to resemble the status typhosus. The tongue, which has been hitherto thickly coated, now becomes black, shows fissures, and bleeds, while the gums are covered with sordes. The pulse becomes feeble, thready, or barely perceptible. The skin is dry and harsh or scaly. The abdomen is tumid or collapsed, the anus paralyzed, and the discharges continuously ooze out to excoriate the perineum. While the brain is usually clear throughout the disease, insomnia, stupor, or coma develop in the gravest cases from absorption of disease-products (Senator), or death suddenly ensues from heart-clot or from thrombus of the venous sinuses of the dura mater (Busey).
Pyæmia announces itself with a series of chills, followed by irregular temperature, by the speedy occurrence of multiple abscesses in distant organs, venous thromboses, affections of the serous membranes, pleuritis, pericarditis, and embolic pneumonia. Gangrene of the intestine, which may occur as early as the third day of the disease (Nägele), is evidenced by the signs of general collapse.
COMPLICATIONS AND SEQUELÆ.—The lighter cases of dysentery, as well as most of the grave cases, run their entire course without complication, and often without sequelæ. But a certain percentage of cases is attended with complications on the part of the joints (rheumatism), of the nervous system (paralysis), and on the part of the liver and the kidneys.
Arthritis, when it occurs, shows itself, as a rule, in the second week of the disease (Eichhorst), or after the disease has run its course, during the period of convalescence (Huelte). That it is not a mere coincidence is evidenced by the fact that it is present in a large number of cases in certain epidemics, while it is not present independently of dysentery. Thus, Braun of Stannenheim saw in the two epidemics of 1833-34 more than forty cases of rheumatism, and Huelte reports ten cases observed by himself in the epidemic at Montargis in 1854. Certain epidemics are distinguished by the rarity of this complication, while most are marked by its absence altogether. In the epidemic at Rahden (1872), 400 cases among 3800 inhabitants, Rapmund saw inflammation of the joints set in only six times; and the entire absence or extreme rarity of it in later epidemics have led most physicians to deny any connection between the diseases, or to regard the joint affection as incident to a complicating scorbutus or neuralgia. All authors who admit it describe the knee-joint as being the most frequent seat of the affection, but acknowledge that it is mostly polyarticular; while there is much difference of opinion whether it ever presents the general signs of true rheumatism—pyrexia, diaphoresis, or its complications on the part of the heart. Huelte maintains that it does not, and that it is allied to gonorrhoeal rheumatism in this respect, while Eichhorst states that it may not only show all these signs, but may be followed in exceptional cases by suppuration and ankylosis. It usually lasts four to six weeks, but neither its occurrence nor its severity stands in any relation to the intensity of the attack of dysentery. It is probably to be regarded as a manifestation of a light pyæmia or septicæmia, as it is a frequent manifestation of this condition in or after scarlatina, puerperal fever, and the septic fevers of surgery.
Paralysis has been observed to occur after dysentery ever since the days of Galen, and, disregarding the observations of ancient and of the older periods of modern times, we find occasional records of cases in our own days. Leyden,6 in reporting a case of paresis and rheumatic pains following an attack of dysentery, says that although post-dysenteric paralysis is now rarely mentioned, it was frequent in the older reports, and claims it as an admitted fact that it occurs not at all infrequently now. Joseph Frank quotes some observations of this kind, and refers especially to the dissertation of Fabricius.7 These paralyses, Fabricius observes, have been seen after the premature suppression of malignant epidemics of dysentery by opiates and astringents. Observations were afterward recorded by Graves in which paralysis occurred after colics and inflammation of the intestines; and English veterinary surgeons mention the fact that paralytic weakness of the posterior extremities of horses and cattle follow attacks of intestinal inflammation. The paralysis, when it occurs, is usually confined to the lower extremities, but may extend to and involve the upper extremities, by preference in the form of paralysis transversa (opposite arm and leg). Brown-Séquard attributes it to reflex contraction of the blood-vessels; Jaccoud, to exhaustion of the nerve-centres; and Röser, to the contact of the inflamed transverse colon with the solar plexus. Remak first suggested the idea of an ascending neuritis—a view which would seem to be corroborated by the paralysis observed after the experiments, by Lewisson, of crushing the uterus, kidneys, bladder, or loop of intestine, and which finds additional support, as Leyden remarks, in the length of time which lapses before it appears. Landouzy8 says that Finger found diffuse myelitis in a patient affected with paralysis supervening upon cancer of the intestine, and that Delioux and Savignac saw spots of softening in the cervical and lumbar region of the cord in the case of a man affected with post-dysenteric paralysis. Weir Mitchell suggests the possibility of other factors—long marches, malaria, bad diet, and injuries to the spine—in the genesis of the cases, mostly paraplegias, observed by him; and Woodward calls attention to lead-poisoning (as by treatment) in explanation of a certain number of cases.
6 "On Reflex Paralysis," Volkmann's Sammlungen.