Symptoms, etc. referable to the Respiratory System.—The dry cough which is the earliest pulmonary symptom in typical cases is to be regarded as an effect of the local irritation caused by the presence of the tuberculous product. This product, increasing and extending, gives rise to circumscribed bronchitis which causes increase of cough with expectoration. The expectoration represents this secondary bronchitis prior to the occurrence of ulceration, the escape of liquefied tuberculous product, and the existence of cavities. The quantity and the characters of the matter expectorated depend on the degree and the extent of the bronchial inflammation, the latter depending on the extent of the phthisical affection. Different cases present wide variations in these respects. The frequency and severity of the cough depend in a great measure on the quantity of the matter of expectoration and its adhesiveness. The matter expectorated, at first semi-transparent mucus, becomes muco-purulent, the characters pertaining to mucus and pus being combined in varying proportions, as in cases of chronic bronchitis. Nummular sputa—so called from the resemblance in form to a coin when lying on a flat surface, the edges often serrated—are considered as casts of small cavities formed by dilated bronchi. A microscopical examination of the sputa may show elastic yellow fibres. The presence of these is almost pathognomonic of phthisis, and denotes either the process of ulceration or exfoliation of tissue from within cavities.8 Liquefied tuberculous product appears in the matter of expectoration as a puriform fluid. It sometimes contains small semi-solid tuberculous masses. The lining membrane of tuberculous cavities furnishes a veritable purulent matter of expectoration. It is stated by Buhl that the presence of alveolar epithelium in the sputa is distinctive of phthisis; hence the name proposed by him, desquamative pneumonia. It is, however, stated by Frischl that the alveolar epithelium is found in the matter expectorated in cases of oedema and congestion of the lungs.9 There is sometimes notable fetor of the matter of expectoration, due to putrescent decomposition of the purulent contents of cavities or to small sloughing portions of pulmonary tissue. The varieties of sputa which have been mentioned may be accompanied by a serous liquid in more or less abundance. Calcareous masses varying in size from a pin's head to a pea are expectorated in some cases. I have known several hundred to be expectorated in a single case. In the instances which have fallen under my observation these pulmonary calculi have been expectorated when the symptoms have denoted arrest and regression of the disease; and it is consistent with this fact to regard them as obsolete tubercles. They are not to be confounded with the small solid bodies sometimes formed in the follicles of the tonsils, the latter consisting of a sebaceous-like product, which is crushed, without crumbling, by pressure, and emits a fetid odor. Since the discovery of the bacillus tuberculosis by Koch microscopical examinations of sputa in a large number of cases by different observers have shown that this parasite is generally, but not invariably, present. Its abundance in the sputa appears to correspond to the rapidity with which the tuberculous affection is progressing, and examinations with reference to its presence and its abundance are of much practical utility in diagnosis and prognosis.
8 In order to discover the elastic fibres readily, Fenwick advises as follows: "Prepare a solution of caustic soda, about twenty grains to an ounce of distilled water. Collect all the patient has expectorated in twelve or twenty-four hours, from ten at night to ten the next morning being the best period. Pour this, previously mixed and well shaken with an equal quantity of the soda solution, into a glass beaker, and boil it over a gas or spirit-lamp, stirring it occasionally with a glass rod. A test-tube does not warm as well as a beaker. As soon as it boils pour it into a conical glass, and add four or five times the amount of cold distilled water. If the mucus is still gelatinous after boiling, you have either added too little soda or not boiled it sufficiently. The cold water carries down to the bottom of the glass any lung-tissues that may be present, where they form a slight deposit in about a quarter of an hour; if no deposit is visible, put the glass aside for two or three hours. Remove the deposit with a dipping-tube, place it in a glass cell, cover it with a piece of thin glass, and examine with a one-inch object-glass. The lung-structures will be often found clinging to hairs and other foreign bodies present in the sputa" (Guide to Medical Diagnosis).
9 Vide Niemeyer by Seitz, tenth ed.
Hæmoptysis occurs in a large proportion of the cases of pulmonary phthisis. It occurs much oftener in the early than in a later period of the disease. As regards the number of attacks, their duration, the intervals between them, and the amount of hemorrhage, there are wide variations. Prior to the formation of cavities the hemorrhage is from the bronchial tubes (bronchorrhagia). After cavities are formed the blood comes from the interior of these. As a rule, bronchial hemorrhage is not followed by the evidence of any increase of the phthisical affection. Not infrequently a sense of relief follows. The analytical study of a large collection of cases shows that the occurrence of bronchial hemorrhage does not diminish, but apparently increases, the chances of arrest and of tolerance of the disease. This statement holds true with regard to cases in which the hemorrhage is often repeated and profuse, as well as to those in which it is slight and infrequent.10
10 Vide Phthisis, in a Series of Clinical Studies, by the author.
Cavernous hemorrhage may be due to rupture or ulceration of parenchymatous bands which traverse cavities, but often it is caused by the bursting of small aneurisms in their walls. It may be so profuse as to prove fatal. Cavities sometimes become filled with coagulated blood, which, if life continue, becomes decomposed and gives rise to a grumous, fetid matter of expectoration. Bronchial hemorrhage is supposed to be caused by a circumscribed hyperæmia at the situation where the blood escapes. In a case under my observation in which death took place shortly after a profuse hæmoptysis, there was congestion limited to the middle lobe of the right lung, and the bronchial tubes in this situation contained bloody mucus, none being found elsewhere. A circumscribed hyperæmia, however, must depend upon some local cause. Probably in most instances this anterior local cause is the tuberculous product. That the escape of blood involves a change in the coats of the vessels from which it escapes is probable.
A rare event occurring in connection with hæmoptysis is the coagulation within the bronchial tubes of fibrin which may be expectorated in the form of casts of the tubes, analogous to those which characterize fibrinous or plastic bronchitis. I have met with an instance, and also with a case in which after death the bronchial tubes of an entire lobe were found to be filled with solidified fibrin. The death in this instance followed quickly a profuse hæmoptysis. There is not the danger connected with the gradual disintegration and expectoration of the coagulated fibrin which was surmised by Niemeyer.
The presence of the tuberculous product in the lungs and the processes to which it gives rise, inclusive of the secondary bronchitis, occasion no pain. Patients often strike the chest with violence, as affording to them evidence that the organs are sound. But in most cases, from time to time during the course of the disease, sharp stitch-like pains occur. They are sometimes slight or moderately severe, but they may be sufficiently intense to confine to the house or even to the bed. They last, usually, but a few days, and recur at variable intervals. They are referred generally to the upper part of the chest, often beneath the scapula. Patients are apt to imagine that the pains are rheumatic. They are symptomatic of successive, circumscribed, dry pleurisies, which are very rarely wanting in cases of phthisis, leading to the pleuritic adhesions constantly found after death. These pleurisies are secondary to the phthisical affection, and recur at epochs when new developments of the latter take place. There is no reason to suppose that they contribute in any way to the increase of the phthisical affection. On the other hand, they protect against one important event at least—namely, perforation of lung, and, as consequent thereon, pneumo-hydrothorax. In this point of view they are conservative. These pleuritic pains are to be discriminated from those of intercostal neuralgia. The neuralgic pains generally are situated lower, and the diagnostic criterion of intercostal neuralgia is available—namely, the tenderness on pressure in the intercostal spaces near the median line in front, the axillary line, and the spinal column.
The respirations are more or less frequent in different cases and at different periods in the same case according to the impairment of the function of hæmatosis by the pulmonary affection and the increased frequency of the heart's action. A sense of the want of breath as implied in the term dyspnoea is, however, seldom sufficient to occasion much suffering. Even when the respirations are considerably increased in number it is rare for the patient to complain of the want of breath when at rest. A degree of muscular weakness which prevents the patient from freeing the bronchial tubes and cavities of morbid products may give rise to distressing dyspnoea. A sudden increase in the frequency of the respirations, with dyspnoea and cyanosis, when not attributable to filling of the bronchial tubes nor to pneumothorax nor pleuritic effusion, points to the development of miliary tubercles in abundance—in other words, to the supervention of acute tuberculosis.
Important complications referable to the respiratory system are laryngitis, non-tuberculous pneumonia, pleurisy with effusion, perforation of lung with pneumo-hydrothorax, pneumorrhagia, and pulmonary gangrene.