CHLOROSIS

is a special form of anæmia distinguished by certain etiological and anatomical peculiarities. In the first place, it is a disease of the female sex; cases in the male are of extreme rarity. In the majority of instances it is associated with disturbed menstrual function or with the evolution of the reproductive organs at the period of puberty. Occasionally it occurs in pregnant women and in children. It is a common disease among the ill-fed, overworked young girls in large towns who are confined all day in close, badly-lighted rooms or who have to do much stair-climbing. Girls of the better classes are by no means exempt; indeed, some writers speak of it as specially prone to affect the higher ranks of life. Lack of proper exercise, good food, and fresh air, the mental stimulation of unhealthy literature, and masturbation, are important factors. Emotional and nervous symptoms may be prominent—so much so that the disease is regarded by some as a neurosis.

The anatomical peculiarities relate to the blood and circulatory system. There is anæmia, but the impoverishment is less in the number than in the corpuscular richness in hæmoglobin. This fact, first pointed out by Duncan,46 has been abundantly confirmed. Thus, for example, in one case, with a globular richness of 85 per cent., the hæmoglobin was only 52 per cent., and in another, with 92 per cent. of red, the hæmoglobin percentage was as low as 64. The numerous investigations of the past few years47 have, among other points, fully established this as perhaps one of the most striking features in chlorosis. The color-value of the individual corpuscle is very much reduced. Of 22 observations of Hayem, the average number of red corpuscles was 3,740,000, and the hæmoglobin reduced to about 50 per cent. In Laache's 13 cases the average percentage of corpuscles was 72, and of hæmoglobin 45. This author has pointed out that in certain cases with all the clinical symptoms of chlorosis well marked there may be very slight reduction in the corpuscles or hæmoglobin; and such he terms pseudo-chlorosis. The red corpuscles in chlorosis vary much in size. Very large forms—giant red cells—are common, and microcytes are sometimes to be seen; but there is not the extreme irregularity in size and outline of the blood in idiopathic anæmia. The presence of a large number of young, imperfectly-formed corpuscles, especially as regards the hæmoglobin, is the distinguishing feature of chlorotic blood. Hayem and Willcocks both regard the average corpuscular diameter to be lower than normal, though many large forms occur. The color of the red corpuscles is noticeably pale, and the marked deficiency in hæmoglobin can be observed in individual corpuscles as well as in the blood-mixture prepared for counting. Quinquaud found the serum normal in quality, but the solids were slightly reduced in amount. Hunt48 has shown that there are peculiar inter-menstrual oscillations in the blood in chlorotics. There is usually a fall in numbers just before the flow, but the individual value remains good; subsequently the number rises, but the color-value is not maintained (Willcocks). Virchow49 pointed out that in many cases of chlorosis there was a defective development of the circulatory system, either congenital or resulting in failure of the normal rate of growth; the parts remained infantile. The heart and arteries were small, the walls of the latter thin, and the calibre of the aorta narrowed. In some instances there was found a compensatory hypertrophy of the heart. Defective development of the uterus and ovaries has also been noted, but these changes on the part of the circulatory and generative organs are not constant features in chlorosis.

46 Sitzungsbericht d. Kais. Akad. d. Wissenschaften zu Wien, 1867.

47 Leichtenstern, Hæmoglobingehalt des Blutes, Leipzig, 1878; Hayem, Recherches sur l'Anatomie, etc. du Sang, 1878; Malassez, Archives de Physiologie, 1877; Moriez, La Chlorose, Paris, 1880; Laache, Die Anämie, Christiania, 1883; Willcocks, Practitioner, 1883.

48 Lancet, ii., 1880.

49 Ueber die Chlorose, etc., Berlin, 1872.

The SYMPTOMS of chlorosis are those of anæmia of moderate grade. As in idiopathic anæmia, the subcutaneous fat is in full, or even extra, amount. The complexion is most peculiar, neither the blanched aspect of hemorrhage nor the muddy pallor of grave anæmia; but there is a curious yellow-green tinge in marked cases which has given the name to the disease ([Greek: chlôros]), and also its popular designation, the green sickness. Breathlessness, palpitation, and tendency to fainting are due to the anæmia. Digestive troubles are also common, and the appetite is often depraved. There are venous and cardiac murmurs. The menstrual functions are almost always deranged, and there may be hysterical and nervous manifestations. Relapses are not uncommon. The intimate pathology of the disease is unknown. In its insidious onset, sometimes causeless, and in certain features of the blood-state, it resembles pernicious anæmia, but it differs from it in many essential particulars. The association with menstrual disorders, the hypoplasia of the circulatory and generative organs in some cases, the favorable course and response to suitable treatment, as well as the sex and period of life, are features peculiar to chlorosis. Then, again, the anæmia is not so intense, and the relation of the hæmoglobin is just the reverse; in chlorosis the individual corpuscles are deficient in hæmoglobin, while in idiopathic anæmia the reverse appears to be the case.

Some regard the blood circulatory and uterine condition as the expression of a congenital defect leading to the formation of a diathesis—and in certain cases this may be so—but some of the most marked cases I have seen have been in girls of healthy families, who after a healthy childhood developed chlorosis at puberty, from which, under suitable treatment, they recovered to become robust and vigorous women. The almost specific action of iron suggests failure of the digestion or assimilation of the minute traces of this substance which are contained in our ordinary foods, and from which the iron of the corpuscles must be derived. Zander50 holds that it is largely due to a defect in the hydrochloric acid of the gastric juice, by which the iron-holding compounds are dissolved, and claims that in chlorosis the administration of this remedy after eating fulfils every indication and enables the iron in the foods to be converted into an absorbable compound.

50 Virchow's Archiv, lxxxiv.