The PROGNOSIS is always very grave, yet cases of recovery have been reported in instances of traumatic origin.

The TREATMENT is that of pericarditis, with great attention to sustaining the action of the heart. This is chiefly effected by stimulants. Opium for its quieting effect is also indicated. In cases of marked cardiac pressure paracentesis has been recommended.

Cancer of the Pericardium.

Cancer of the pericardium is one of the rarest of all cancerous affections, never occurring as a primary disease, but consequent on cancer in some other part of the body, generally on cancer adjacent to the heart. It may be the result of direct extension of cancer or of secondary formations. In cancer of the pericardium the parietal layer of the sac is the one always attacked. The extension of the disease from the bronchi and mediastinal glands, from the lungs, pleura, oesophagus, and stomach, is the common cause. Cancer will under certain conditions produce lymphous exudation and adhesions and serous, hemorrhagic, and even purulent effusions. When lymph is thrown out friction sound exists and adhesions may follow. Serous effusion with little or no inflammation is generally present in cancer of the pericardium, and results from the obstruction in the vessels caused by pressure or by direct extension of the disease to the vessels. If the effusion be hemorrhagic, it can be attributed to the same cause. Pus is generally the result of erosion of vessels and membrane.

The DIAGNOSIS of cancer of the pericardium is practically impossible, for the physical signs are essentially the same as in pericarditis from other causes, the darting, lancinating pain excepted; yet even the pain may not be sufficiently typical to lead us to a correct conclusion. Therefore, as a rule, the existence of the disease can only be suspected, or regarded as very probable in consequence of the general features of the malady.

The rarity of this affection is seen in the summary given in Ziemssen's Cyclopædia. Köhler noted 6 cases of cancer of the pericardium in 9118 autopsies; Günsburg found 1 case of cancer in 1700 autopsies; and Willigk, 7 cases in 477 autopsies of persons dying of cancer.

Death, which is the result in all cases, is generally by exhaustion. Other diseases of a nature allied to cancer also attack or involve the pericardium, such as lymphadenoma or lymphosarcoma in the mediastinum; the pathology is practically the same as that of cancer, and the general symptoms and the termination are alike.

Hydatids41 give rise to growths which occasion a surmise of cancer; so do those white calcified bodies formed in concentric layers known as cardiliths. Neither has any diagnostic signs by which it can be distinguished.

41 See Rokitansky's Pathological Anatomy, and Klob, "Zeitschrift der K. K.," Gesellschaft der Aertze zu Wien, 1860.

Tubercular Pericarditis.