Dysphonia and aphonia, the voice being husky or hoarse and the whisper stridulous, denote laryngitis. These diagnostic symptoms are never wanting, and the laryngeal complication may be excluded if they be absent; but the extent to which the larynx is affected is of course determinable by means of the laryngoscope. The affection in some cases extending to the epiglottis, paroxysms of cough and spasm of the glottis are produced by the act of swallowing food and drinks. The interference with deglutition may be so great as to restrict seriously alimentation, and in this way may hasten a fatal termination of the disease. In the majority of cases, however, deglutition is not interfered with. There is very rarely laryngeal obstruction to respiration. The affection involves little if any liability to the supervention of acute laryngitis or oedema of the glottis.

In most cases the laryngitis occurs at a considerable period after the commencement of the pulmonary affection, this period, in a proportion of more than one-third, being from two to four years. In some instances it seems to occur coincidently with, and in some to precede, the pulmonary affection. In the latter instances it is probable that latent tuberculous disease of the lungs preceded the laryngitis. The diversity as regards the interval of time between the date of the pulmonary affection and of the occurrence of the laryngitis, the apparent coincidence in the occurrence of both in some instances, and the want of any uniformity in different cases as regards the amount of pulmonary disease and the stage of its progress when the laryngitis occurs, render it a rational conclusion that laryngitis is not dependent on the disease of the lungs, but that it proceeds from the same cause which determines the latter.

Excluding the instances in which the laryngitis involves the epiglottis and interferes with alimentation, clinical experience teaches that this complication does not diminish the chances of arrest or recovery from the pulmonary affection, and that it has no untoward influence on the duration of the disease in the cases which sooner or later end fatally.11 As a rule, in cases which recover the voice remains permanently more or less affected.

11 Vide Phthisis, in a Series of Clinical Studies, by the author.

Acute lobar pneumonia or pneumonic fever is sometimes an intercurrent affection in cases of phthisis. The cases are so rare as to show absence of any predisposition to that disease derived from the phthisical affection. The pneumonia ends in recovery in a proportion of cases sufficiently large to show that, as a rule, the prognosis is not unfavorably influenced by phthisis, and, as a rule also, the course of the latter is not influenced unfavorably by the pneumonia. A circumscribed pneumonia is an occasional complication of phthisis. Its non-tuberculous character is shown by the rapidity and completeness of the absorption of the intra-vesicular product. This circumscribed pneumonia gives rise to physical signs which appear to denote a rapid and considerable increase of the phthisical affection. The disappearance within a short period of the added dulness on percussion, bronchial respiration, and bronchophony, is the evidence that these signs represent a circumscribed pneumonia occurring as a complication.

Pleurisy with serous effusion is not an infrequent complication at an early period in the course of the disease. There is very little if any liability to its occurrence at an advanced period, except as associated with pneumothorax from perforation of lung. It is probably secondary in certain of the cases in which the phthisical affection appears to follow the pleurisy. The pleuritic effusion appears to retard the progress of the phthisical affection. Clinical experience shows that this complication, if it be unilateral, is not an untoward event. A double pleurisy with effusion is evidence of the existence of phthisis.

Perforation of lung, giving rise to pleurisy with effusion and pneumothorax, is an event which belongs, with some exceptions, to an advanced period of the disease. The perforation is caused by rupture of the wall of a cavity superficially situated where pleuritic adhesion from circumscribed dry pleurisy had not taken place. In most instances the occurrence of the perforation is quickly followed by acute pain and orthopnoea, with notable disturbance of the circulation, fever, and prostration, these symptoms being due to the sudden entrance of air into the pleural sac, the development of acute inflammation, and rapid serous effusion. The recognition of the pneumo-hydrothorax by means of physical signs is easy. The suffering of the patient becomes less after twenty-four or forty-eight hours. In the great majority of cases death takes place within a short period; that is, within a few days or weeks. The duration of life depends on the amount of phthisical disease, together with the condition of the patient as regards strength, etc. In some instances, the perforation taking place when the phthisical affection is small and accompanied by favorable symptoms, the pneumo-hydrothorax is tolerated for a long period. The accumulation of liquid within the pleural sac sometimes causes the air to disappear, and the pneumo-hydrothorax is converted into simple pleurisy with large effusion.

Pneumorrhagia and pulmonary gangrene are very rare complications of pulmonary phthisis. The analytical study of nearly 700 recorded cases furnished but a single example of each of these complications.

Symptoms and Complications referable to the Circulatory System, including Temperature.—More or less acceleration of the pulse and elevation of the temperature of the body belong to the clinical history of pulmonary phthisis. It may be stated that the pulse and temperature are never normal if the disease be progressive. A persistent normal pulse and no elevation of temperature therefore denote arrest or non-progression of the disease. It may also be stated that the acceleration of the pulse and the increase of temperature form a good criterion of the rapidity or otherwise of the progress of the tuberculous disease, provided inflammatory complications be excluded. The disease is progressing rapidly in proportion to the frequency of the pulse and the increase of temperature.

If the disease be progressive daily exacerbations of fever take place. They occur in the afternoon usually, and continue into the evening or the nighttime, ending in perspiration which is more or less profuse. The exacerbations are often, but not always, preceded by chilly sensations, and sometimes by a well-pronounced chill which may be accompanied by rigors. During the febrile exacerbations the cheeks frequently present a circumscribed flush and the eyes have a glistening appearance. The term hectic fever has long been applied to the febrile exacerbations which characterize progressive phthisis.