198 Thèse de Paris.

199 Thèse de Paris, 1878.

200 Clin. Méd.

201 Reynolds's Syst. of Med., 1871.

202 Dis. of the Chest.

203 Thèse de Paris, 1880.

204 Path. Anatomy.

We may have hemorrhagic effusions occurring simultaneously with acute pleurisy, with pulmonary congestions, pneumonias, and apoplexy of the lung. They are caused by the violence of the inflammation with local plethora, producing a sanguinary stasis—a mechanical result of intense congestion. Moutard-Martin (R.) states that in these cases the red globules come through the walls of the blood-vessels, as do the leucocytes, by diapedesis. Jaccoud205 admits that the blood-vessels are altered by the inflammation, perhaps also by the derangement in the vaso-motor innervation. The tissue of the pleura is penetrated by both red and white blood-corpuscles, and the blood-vessels and lymphatics are dilated, red corpuscles being found in lymphatics. By far the greatest number of hemorrhagic pleurisies are secondary to pleural inflammations, either resulting from acute causes or from cancerous or tubercular disease, or from diseases causing a dyscrasia of the blood, such as nephritic diseases, hepatic, cardiac, scorbutic affections, or alcoholic excesses. The secondary result of these pleurisies is the formation of neo-membranes, fibrous in their nature, which pathological anatomy shows contain, as they become organized, abundant blood-vessels with thin and brittle walls. A slight exciting cause is all that is necessary to produce their rupture. The primary cause is the false membrane, and, in some cases, vascular granulations, which have rapidly formed, perhaps in twenty-four hours—conditions eminently favorable to the production of hemorrhage. In cancerous, tubercular, and dyscrasial conditions of the blood, the blood-vessels are especially weak and easily give way, owing to the defective nutritive properties of the blood itself, just as, in typhoid fever, we have nasal and intestinal hemorrhage, and in typhus, petechiæ. In 200 cases collected by Moutard-Martin206 there was found intra-pleural effusion in three-eighths of the cases. Only one-third of that number were hemorrhagic. In 42 cancers observed between 1872 and 1876, 35 were without pleural effusion, 1 only was hemorrhagic. M. Moutard-Martin reports 34 observations of hemorrhagic pleurisy produced by cancer, 19 by tubercle, and 31 following simple pleurisy. Of these last there were 7 cases of effusion complicated with a pneumonia, 3 with a cirrhosis, 6 with a cardiac affection: all except 12 of these cases had some complication. Most of these (12) recovered, so he had not the autopsies to verify his diagnosis. Rayer207 cites 4 cases of bloody effusion in the pleura occurring in the course of a nephritis. Poutin208 reports 1 in renal sclerosis. M. Natalis-Guyon209 reports an epidemic of measles where many infants died of hemorrhagic pleurisy. Marguerite cites 13 cases complicating pneumonia, granulations, chronic pleurisy, small-pox, etc.

205 Clin. Méd.

206 Loc. cit.