Sayre has published an extraordinary case in the Transactions of the Pathological Society. He calls it chronic proliferative peritonitis; it might be called more aptly the consequence of peritonitis.
A large, strong man fell from a hammock, the rope breaking, upon his shoulders, and felt a severe pain in his stomach, and soon developed symptoms of peritonitis. This pain never entirely subsided. The peritonitis was recognized. About one month after he was tapped, and 240 ounces of serum were drawn. He was tapped one hundred and eighty-seven times, and 12035/16 pounds of fluid were taken from him during the remainder of his life. At post-mortem examination 3000 cc. of yellow serum were found. The liver and spleen were covered by a thick layer of false membrane, intestines were glued together in the upper part of the abdomen, and the stomach was adherent to the lower surface of the liver. The portal vein was contracted by this membranous coating. There were numerous other lesions in the heart and pleura, but these will account for the dropsy.
This man was unusually strong and hearty until 1876, when he had an attack of double pleuro-pneumonia, and in 1878 he slipped on the front steps and fell, but seemed to recover from the effects of this. The fall from the swing occurred in July, 1879. He died in February, 1884.10
10 Med. Record, April 19, 1884.
Tubercular Peritonitis.
This form of disease is by no means uniform in its first symptoms or in its progress. The only things uniformly attending it are tubercles on the peritoneum and more or less of inflammatory effusion, chiefly lymph and serum; tumor and hardness of the bowels, general or local; deranged function of the stomach and intestines; emaciation; and extreme fatality.
In some cases the invasion is acute and marked—a chill followed by fever, vomiting, early development of meteorism, and in a few days a point or points of resistance to pressure, but not necessarily dulness on percussion. In a few days the febrile action and the meteorism may subside, leaving the symptoms of local peritonitis. But we have not long to wait for a renewal of them and an evident extension of the inflammatory action. Remission and relapse alternate at varying intervals, until the whole extent of the peritoneal surface seems to be involved in inflammation. With this mode of development meteorism may not be renewed in the most common way. The lymphy product of inflammation may so bind the intestines to the posterior walls of the abdomen that they cannot extend forward, but are pushed upward against the liver and diaphragm, and so encroach on the thoracic space. But then the anterior parietes are tense and hard, and do not move in respiration. The febrile heat may not continue more than two or three months, but the pulse will be frequent to the end. There will be a thinning of bowel walls, and here and there a knuckle of adherent intestines may cause some prominence and give some resonance on percussion. There will be also occasional vomiting, and the dejections will be irregular—maybe only deficient or thin; there may be an alternation of constipation and diarrhoea.
Tuberculous ulcerations of the mucous layer of the bowels is not uncommon in tubercular peritonitis, and these ulcers have in rare cases perforated and allowed the fecal matter to accumulate in considerable quantity in a sac limited by previous adhesions. In all forms of tubercular peritonitis death is caused as often by grave complications as by what appears to be the primary disease. The affection occurs in probably every instance in those who had at the beginning, or had acquired in its progress, what we call the tubercular diathesis. We are not surprised, therefore, to find on inspection a wide diffusion of tubercles in the body, particularly on other serous membranes, and in the lungs. Death may occur, then, from phthisis pulmonalis or from pleurisy or meningitis, as well as from the exhaustion and accidents of the peritoneal disease. The effusion serum or turbid serum is very common in tubercular peritonitis, and can be recognized by the dulness it produces in part of the cavity, and sometimes by fluctuation. It is often sacculated, but it is not constantly found after death, it having been absorbed before, and perhaps long before, that event.
In other cases the invasion of the disease is stealthy and deceiving. It comes so quietly that the patient is not conscious of any local disorder beyond a dyspepsia and irregular action of the bowels. He has a pulse of growing frequency, but if he knows it he ascribes it to his dyspepsia. He is slowly losing flesh and strength; this he accounts for in the same way. At length a perceptible swelling of the bowels attracts his attention. At this stage the physician finds that the swollen bowels are tympanitic everywhere or only in the upper, while there is evidence of fluid effusion in the more depending, parts. He discovers some, it may be little, tenderness on pressure, and a pulse of 85, or maybe 90, increasing in frequency toward evening. The appetite is poor, the digestion slow, and occasionally there is vomiting; the complexion is pale and a little dingy; the skin of the abdomen may be dry and rough or may be natural; some colicky pains have been or soon will be felt. From this point the disease gradually advances. The distension of the bowels slowly increases or they are firmly retracted; the emaciation increases; the strength diminishes; there is often cough, which is generally dry; the bowels are slow or diarrhoea alternates with constipation; with the distended bowels there is always more than natural resonance on percussion, except when there is fluid effusion, though not often the full tympanitic sound observed in acute diffuse peritonitis. This resonance is not equal, always, in different parts of the abdomen; the respiration is embarrassed and almost wholly thoracic. The abdomen is often as large as that of a female at full term of pregnancy, and indeed the condition has been mistaken for pregnancy. This is an inexcusable blunder in a case like that which I have in mind—a young unmarried woman. She had no dulness on percussion in the space that would be occupied by the gravid uterus, but rather resonance. The case might have been a little less clear if there had been fluid effusion in the abdominal cavity, but if this were not encysted it would flow from one side of the abdomen to the other when the patient turned correspondingly in bed; if it was encysted, there would be small chances that it would have the shape and position of the gravid uterus; if it had, there would be no chance of hearing in it the foetal heart or feeling the foetal movements; and after all this there remains the experimentum crucis—a vaginal examination.