TREATMENT.—If time is allowed, every effort must be made by local and general treatment to arrest the hemorrhage—ice-bags and hot-water bags ought alternately to be applied to the chest and between the scapula; the patient to be kept in the horizontal position and made to rest quietly; ice taken by mouth; small doses of morphia and large doses of ergotin must be given promptly hypodermically, as the stomach is in no condition to absorb remedies readily. If the accumulation be excessive and continues to embarrass the respiration very much, we recommend free incisions to take out sufficient blood to relieve the pressure and great dyspnoea. Unless danger is imminent, this is a hazardous experiment, as letting in atmospheric air among blood-clots may seriously complicate the condition. Should pleuritis or other complications occur, they must be rationally treated.
Growths in the Pleural Cavity.
Some authors mention various tumors which are rarely met with in the pleural cavity, and which are not peculiar to the serous membrane of the pleura. Among them may be placed sarcomas, fibro-sarcomas, and epithelioma. Their presence in other organs may assist in the diagnosis. Other varieties exist more or less connected with chronic pleurisies. Among these are fibromas, cartilaginous and osseous formations. Rokitansky speaks of lipomas as deposited on the costal pleura. The only varieties which we think it necessary to call attention to are cancer and hydatids.
CANCER OF THE PLEURA.—Cancer of the pleura is not a very rare disease, but ordinarily it is a secondary formation, coming from cancerous disease of the mediastinum, of the lung, or of some abdominal organ. Some authors doubt whether it is primary even in the lungs and mediastinum. It certainly is not often met with as a primary disease of those organs. Lebert254 had only seen 6 observations, in 447 cases of cancer, involving the mediastinum, the pleura, and the lungs. Walshe255 reported 29 cases of primitive cancer of the respiratory organs; in 18 cases one lung was diseased with its pleura, and in 13 the right lung. Lépine256 in 1869 communicated a very curious case of primary cancer of the pleura in a child ten years of age. The right pleural cavity was filled by a white scirrhous tumor. Darolles257 (1874) reported another example of primary cancer of the pleura, which afterward spread to the lung. Andral, Vidal, and Lebert reported cases where the tumors appeared to develop simultaneously in the pleura and other organs. Primary cancer of the pleura may exceptionally occur, but ordinarily the disease results from its extension step by step, or else distant propagation, from lungs, breast, mediastinum, or the abdominal organs. Most frequently the secondary cancer appears more or less independently of the primitive tumor, and is seen in the form of disseminated points on the surface of one or both folds of the pleura. This propagation of cancer is now generally admitted to be through the intermediary of the lymphatic system; in fact, the lymphatics are themselves attacked by the degeneration, and they are seen, particularly on the surface of the pleura, in the form of white small cords. Some modern pathologists consider that the serous cavities are lymphatic cavities, which can, just as the vessels themselves, serve as ways of generalizing the disease (Cornil and Ranvier, Charcot, Lépine, and Virchow).
254 Traité Prac. Mal. des Cancereuses, Paris, 1851.
255 Nature and Treatment of Cancer, London, 1846.
256 Bull. de la Soc. Anat., 1869.
257 Quoted by Fernet, Nouveau Dict. Méd., vol. xxviii.
PATHOLOGICAL ANATOMY.—Primary cancer of the pleura is ordinarily encephaloid and multiple. Extended infiltration is very rarely found. Lebert reports one case in an infant of seven months. The multiple masses are ordinarily soft and pulpy, varying in volume from the size of a grain of millet-seed to that of a small nut. The aspect is yellowish-white. The juice is rarely pressed out of them. Under the microscope we see large cells and multiple cells with their nuclei. The small granulations or the lenticular masses are flat, resembling drops of wax. We may have solid bodies possessing all the characters of scirrhous, encephaloid, and colloid, grayish, or gelatinous structure. These cancerous productions are generally vascular, especially in the encephaloid variety. Their rupture frequently produces hæmothorax and hemorrhagic pleurisies. The bronchial glands, and finally the cervical glands, often become involved.
SYMPTOMS.—The symptoms of pleural cancer, especially of the smaller and secondary deposits, are often obscure and indefinite. They are not sufficiently definite to attract attention during life. If the masses are scirrhous and large, they press upon the lungs, impede respiration, and give rise to dyspnoea. If the disease is propagated from the lungs or breast, we may suspect cancer where we have a dull pain with some cough. Pain, indeed, is constant, but not violent, unless the nodules excite local inflammation. When scirrhous tumors press upon the intercostal nerves, the pain is very persistent. External pressure over the points gives rise to pain. The dyspnoea increases as the size of the tumor increases. The expectoration is occasionally bloody. The physical signs are sometimes characteristic—dulness on percussion, absence of respiratory murmurs, friction sounds, no vocal fremitus.