PATHOLOGY.—This does not differ from aneurism in other vessels. The number may be from one to many, usually not more than two or three. The size is generally that of a pea, often it is smaller, and sometimes it is as large as a large nut. The termination is usually rupture with fatal hemorrhage, and in far the majority of cases this occurs into the pericardium.
SYMPTOMS.—In most all of the cases I have found recorded there were no symptoms till rupture of the sac occurred, giving rise to death from hemorrhage. Then those symptoms which might be expected occurred—namely, great præcordial pain, dyspnoea, suffocation, tumultuous heart, irregular and intermittent pulse, and sudden death.
DIAGNOSIS, PROGNOSIS, and TREATMENT need not be considered, as the disease is not recognizable.
Occlusion of the Coronary Artery.
Occlusion, more or less complete, of one or both of the orifices of the coronary artery has been met with in connection with chronic endarteritis of the root of the aorta. The accompanying sclerosis may draw the orifices up like the strings of a purse, or a calcific plate may extend from one side, or perhaps, detached, may lie simply applied to the orifice. In rare cases the chief disease may be in the artery itself, one of the main trunks or a branch being affected.
The PATHOLOGY is the same as that already described under Endarteritis, stenosis being an early consequence of the process, and persisting, or even increasing, to the last.
The SYMPTOMS observed in such cases are neither peculiar nor diagnostic. They consist of those depending on the concurrent affections, as of the cardiac valves, muscular tissue, or aortic arterio-sclerosis. Prominent among them are dyspnoea, palpitation, sudden cardiac distress, painful pressure in the region of the heart, great anxiety; at last pallor of the skin, feeble cardiac impulse, indistinctness of the cardiac sounds, the right ventricle continuing to contract forcibly till the end. There is oedema of the lungs at last, and on post-mortem examination fatty degeneration of the heart-walls is found as a secondary consequence of the occlusion.
Embolism and Thrombosis.
Although these conditions are rarely found, yet a sufficient number of cases is already on record to enable us to form a tolerably good idea of the symptoms which accompany them. These latter in embolism remarkably resemble those observed in the lower animals on ligation of the coronary arteries. In the animals experimented on a rapid enfeeblement of the heart's action ensued. The phenomena occurred in the following order: First, there was retardation of the rhythmical cardiac contractions, the left ventricle being primarily affected. At first, the right ventricle beat faster, and then gradually became slow. The beats became slower and slower till they ceased, the left ventricle ceasing to contract a little before the right. The second result was a gradual loss of power of the cardiac contraction. The third result was the gradual distension of the left auricle when the left coronary artery was compressed. The auricle swelled up more and more, became bright red, and the rhythmical contractions changed to oscillatory movements, which ultimately ceased entirely. The right ventricle and auricle continued to contract powerfully, and the left ventricle feebly.
EMBOLISM.