TREATMENT must be purely symptomatic.

Rupture of the Coronary Artery.

This may occur independent of aneurism. There are no premonitory symptoms in some cases, death taking place suddenly. In other cases vague and irregular symptoms lead the patient to understand that he is not in perfect health. The symptoms of the disease are not characteristic. Those which have been recorded are a difficulty of breathing, a sense of constriction across the chest, or a pain and feeling of anxiety in the præcordia; a frequent, feeble, and perhaps very irregular pulse; epigastric pain and tenderness. The extremities are cold. The mind remains clear. The physical signs are increased area of flatness in the cardiac region, due to the escape of blood into the pericardium, and scarcely audible cardiac sounds. The symptoms may extend over a period varying from a few moments to several days. Usually, some of the changes indicative of arterio-sclerosis are found in the artery.


DISEASES OF THE PULMONARY ARTERY.

Acute inflammation of the coats of the pulmonary artery has only been found associated with the pyæmic process as circumscribed abscesses of the wall.

Chronic Endarteritis (Atheroma; Arterio-sclerosis).

Endarteritis of the pulmonary artery, though quite rare, is occasionally met with in persons the subject of rheumatism, gout, syphilis, or alcoholism. It is seen only when the pressure is abnormally increased in the pulmonary vessels, especially in diseases of the mitral valve. It is usually accompanied by a more pronounced disease of the aorta, but is occasionally seen alone. The extent of disease is hardly ever so great as that found in the other large vessels, and at most amounts to the presence of prominent hard yellow or gray patches in the intima, with perhaps ulcerated surfaces, and rarely containing a deposit of lime salts. Complete rigidity has been observed extending far into the lung. The wall of the vessel may be irregularly dilated and its elasticity diminished. Usually, the disease is in a much milder form, presenting perhaps a small amount of fatty degeneration of the intima, and is not infrequently associated with mitral stenosis or insufficiency (notably the former), pulmonary fibrosis or emphysema, with accompanying hypertrophy of the right ventricle. No symptoms have thus far been found to be distinctly referable to atheroma of this artery.

Dilatation and Aneurism.