7 Paralysis seu hemiplegia transversa resolutionem brachii unius et pedis alterius exhibet, Helmstedt, 1750.
8 Des Paralysies dans les Maladies aigues.
Abscess of the liver gives rise to few distinctive symptoms, and is mostly recognized or suspected, in the absence of positive signs, by the persistence or obstinacy of the dysentery. The ease and impunity with which aspiration may be performed in its recognition justifies the use of it in every doubtful case.
Regarding complications on the part of the kidneys, Zimmerman recognizes four classes of cases: (1) mild cases, showing no albumen and no casts; (2) severe, long-continued cases, with putrid stools, status nervosus, and collapse, showing albumen; (3) cases commencing with nervous symptoms, paralysis, scanty urine, showing kidneys filled with exudation-cells and detritus; and (4) cases of speedy renal complication and death. To these may be added the cases of protracted chronic dysentery with long-continued suppuration, entailing the possibility, of really rare actual occurrence, of amyloid degeneration and chronic parenchymatous change (Bartels).
Dysentery may be further complicated by parotitis; by venous thrombosis (phlegmasia dolens); by diphtheritic deposits on other mucous surfaces, which Virchow declares to be exceedingly rare; and by hydrops, which is oftener a concomitant of the period of convalescence.
Besides the deformities of the colon, which may ensue as a consequence of ulceration or peritonitis, a long attack of dysentery is apt to leave a hyperæsthetic or non-resistant state of the mucous surface, so that every imprudence in exposure or in diet begets an intestinal catarrh or a relapse of the disease.
DIAGNOSIS.—When dysentery presents itself with its whole train of symptoms the recognition of the disease is very easy. The tormina and tenesmus, the peculiar discharges, the rapid reduction of strength, leave no doubt as to the nature of the affection. The prevalence of an epidemic of the disease will often establish the character of a case even when all the signs are not present or when anomalies occur. Embarrassment in diagnosis only attends the recognition of catarrhal or isolated cases, and in these cases there may be a doubt as between dysentery and diarrhoea—if such a symptom can be called a disease—or typhoid fever, cholera, or some purely local affection of the rectum, cancer, hemorrhoids, etc. In children difficulty of diagnosis may arise as between dysentery and intussusception.
Dysentery is differentiated from that lighter form of intestinal catarrh whose main symptom is diarrhoea by the presence of tenesmus in dysentery, as well as by its mucous, muco-purulent, diphtheritic, and bloody discharges. Dysentery lasts longer than diarrhoea as a rule, and does not yield so readily to treatment.
Typhoid fever shows from the start brain symptoms, which are absent from dysentery; has a typical temperature-curve, whereas there may be no fever in dysentery, or, if any, of irregular remittent type; is often prefaced by epistaxis and attended with bronchitis, both of which are absent in dysentery; and exhibits ochre-colored pea-soup stools, altogether different from those of dysentery.
Cholera morbus distinguishes itself from dysentery by its sudden onset, its profuse vomiting and discharges, its violent cramps, and the speedy collapse.