The hemorrhagic diathesis, as distinguished from the specific bleeders' heredity, does not often manifest its activity through the lungs, and, as correlative, phthisis does not often show hemorrhages in other organs than the lungs.24 Leudet has met in 244 cases of phthisis 9 times hemorrhages in other organs than the lungs; oftenest by the intestine, the skin, the nasal mucous membrane; more rarely by the brain and urinary organs; 10 times between the muscles of the abdominal walls. These considerations suggest that the phthisical hæmoptysis is distinct from that of hæmophilia or the hemorrhagic diathesis, and has an independent origin.
24 "Rémarques sur la Diathese hémorrhagique," Mém. Soc. de la Biologie, 1859, p. 179.
Some facts in regard to the previous diseases of patients admitted into the Brompton Hospital with phthisis are given in the second medical report of that institution, which may have a bearing on the special features, such as hæmoptysis. Among 1973 patients admitted, 275 were found to have suffered with well-marked attacks of rheumatism, and 16 had acute symptoms of it while in the hospital, making a larger number than of any other disease, fevers coming next with 238. The connection of forms of hemorrhage with so-called rheumatism suggests a possible influence of that kind in favoring hæmoptyses during the evolution of phthisis. We know of no facts collected with the view of studying this relation. If such a conclusion were sustained, it would tend to confirm the view connecting hæmoptysis with hæmophilia or the hemorrhagic diathesis.
Williams25 gives a statement qualifying the assumption that the hemorrhagic variety of consumption specially originates in family predisposition, for in 72 cases out of 1000 tabulated cases of phthisis family predisposition was present in only 25 instances. This percentage is scarcely small enough to exclude a predisposition.
25 Pulmonary Consumption, p. 157.
Considering hæmoptysis in this aspect, as a result of heredity, does not account for all the cases with which we meet. We are surprised occasionally by the appearance of pulmonary hemorrhage where heredity of phthisis cannot be traced. Such persons present the aspect of a vulnerable state; they yield readily to a phthisical invasion. Some of the so-called cases of phthisis ab hæmoptoe are found in this class, yet they may have inherited a phthisical predisposition, brought about by various degenerating influences acting on their ancestors, such as antihygienic surroundings, bad air, insufficient food, frequent childbearing, and excessive nursing. The heredity is not in special symptoms, but in a predisposition which needs only some exciting cause for a specific symptomatology that may be carried forward to the next generation.
One individual may himself yield to the same degenerating influences, and live with more or less of an acquired predisposition until similar exciting causes reveal his specific weakness. Another may find that he has a phthisis directly acquired from a single attack of severe illness without the aid of any element of heredity or of the acquired predisposition. The gradation would then be inherited predisposition, acquired predisposition, and acquired phthisis. Hæmoptysis may find its origin in these several relations of heredity. Combined, they represent the law of uniformity and the law of variation in hereditary transmissions. If these general observations be correct, they show that the ordinarily stated percentage of transmission of hæmoptysis in inherited phthisis does not express the totality of influence operating in the production of hæmoptysis. Something must be subtracted from the so-called non-inherited phthisis and added to the inherited form.
When we attempt to express the relation of acquired or non-inherited phthisis to hæmoptysis, we find no sufficient data. Thompson's table above given is assumed by him as showing that the influences superinducing hæmoptysis in the non-hereditary class are equivalent to the heredity operating through the father, which is quite subordinate.
R. Thompson26 states that out of 1064 of his cases of well-marked inherited phthisis, 426 had hæmoptysis; of 1016 when phthisis was not known to be inherited, 558 had hæmoptysis.
26 Loc. cit., p. 110. In a later work Thompson (Family Phthisis, London, 1884) states that the general effect of the paternal inheritance is to reduce the number of cases of copious bleeding for the total period of life, but an excess is observed for the special period between twenty and twenty-five; that in the inheritance of the females from the father the number of cases of bleeding is large, the number of the copious cases being twice as many as the moderate. The effect of double heredity upon males was to make the cases of copious bleeding numerous, and that nearly half the total number of cases were disposed to bleed. In females there was an increase in the number of cases of moderate amount. As regards acquired phthisis among males, that hæmoptysis is a well-marked feature, and nearly three-fourths are cases of copious bleeding; as to acquired phthisis among females, that the number of cases is considerably smaller, the reduction being marked in the cases of copious bleeding.