PROGNOSIS.—A case of typhlitis stercoralis has no gravity, and should terminate or be terminated within twenty-four to forty-eight hours after its recognition. Neglected or unrecognized cases, however, are not infrequently fatal from the circumscribed or more especially diffuse peritonitis which may ensue.
Typhlitis independent of fecal impaction is always a grave affection, requiring in every instance a very guarded prognosis.
Every form of typhlitis is more fatal in childhood than in adult life, and any case of the disease may present grave complications or assume a dangerous form at any time. The greater danger of childhood lies in the greater liability to peritonitis. Most subsequent writers confirm this statement, first made by Willard Parker, who also remarked that suppurative processes, abscess formation, is more common in the adult. The mortality of perityphlitis alone in childhood is 70 per cent., in adult life 30 per cent., so that the proportion of recoveries is exactly the reverse of these figures at the different periods of life.
The general adoption of the opium treatment has, however, rendered the prognosis of typhlitis far more favorable—has, in fact, reduced the mortality in adult life from 80 per cent., the appalling figures of the older statistics (Volz), to 30 per cent., the ratio of modern times.
The means of earlier detection and readier relief of accumulated pus have also contributed much to reduce the mortality of typhlitis. In 1872, Bull of New York had to report of 67 cases of perityphlitic abscess collected by him, mostly treated without operation, a mortality of 47½ per cent., while ten years later (1882) Noyes of Providence was able to report of 100 cases treated by operation a mortality of only 15 percent. (Pepper7).
7 "Contribution to the Clinical Study of Typhlitis, etc.," Trans. Med. Soc. Penna., 1883.
The development of fistulæ or wandering abscess, the occurrence of pyæmia and peritonitis, necessarily aggravate the prognosis of a simple case. Perforation is fatal of necessity, yet cases are not wanting where recovery has occurred even after this gravest of all the accidents of the disease. Thus, Patschkrowski reports, from Frerichs' clinic, a case of recovery after perforation, and Pepper mentions the results of an autopsy made upon an old man who died of vesical hemorrhage, in whom he "found that there had, at some unknown previous time, been perforation of the appendix."
PROPHYLAXIS.—The prevention of typhlitis has reference more especially to cases of habitual recurrence of the disease in adults, or to the earliest, prodromatous, stage in childhood. The slightest manifestation of pain in the right iliac region should be looked upon with suspicion in these cases, and absolute rest enjoined at once. Since in childhood perforation has occurred in insidious cases after so slight an irritation as a laxative or an enema, or even after a bath, every provocation of this kind should be avoided. Injunction is to be put upon all solid food in all cases in the inception as well as throughout the course of the affection, that the element of coprostasis be not superadded to the irritation of the disease. Adults subject to frequent recurrences or relapses will thus avoid also the development or aggravation of an intestinal catarrh, which in other cases of trivial import may become dangerous to them. Many cases of typhlitis are doubtless aborted at the start by the observance of absolute rest and abstinence from food or rigid diet at the start.
TREATMENT.—Perhaps no disease requires such careful consideration of its cause or form, inasmuch as the different varieties call for entirely different treatment. A typhlitis stercoralis, for instance, requires an exclusive evacuant treatment, whereas a peri- or paratyphlitis demands a treatment that shall put the bowels at rest.
The safest and most effective method of emptying the cæcum of impacted feces is by irrigation of the bowels by means of the funnel syringe devised by Hegar. The patient is put in the knee, elbow, or chest posture, and warm water—which is the best solvent for hardened feces—is allowed to slowly inundate the whole tract of the colon, after the manner and with the precautions already pointed out in the article on dysentery. Feeble or reduced patients should be supported in this posture until as much water as possible is slowly introduced. As a rule, a single thorough irrigation will suffice, or one or several additional operations may be required to secure the desired effect. At the same time, broken doses, twenty grains, of sulphate of magnesia may be administered every hour or two, not so much for the purpose of exciting additional peristalsis as of turning water into the intestinal canal from above.