It is by no means always the ailing or delicate who are attacked; many of the cases have occurred in men previously strong and robust.
After excluding all these factors, which prevail in a considerable proportion, there still remain cases without, as Addison says, any discoverable cause whatever—cases to which in our present knowledge we may apply the term idiopathic. These may be primary, and the others, in which some one or other of the above-mentioned causes appears to have prevailed, secondary anæmias, the latter to be distinguished from a host of other sequential anæmias only by the fact of a progressive and pernicious course.
Of 91 observations collected by Eichorst, in 24 cases the disease appeared to have come on spontaneously, and 67 as the result of various causes: pregnancy and parturition, 29; digestive troubles, 24; loss of blood, etc., 7; bad hygienic conditions, 7.
SYMPTOMS.—The classical description of Addison must ever be quoted in this connection: "It makes its approach in so slow and insidious a manner that the patient can hardly fix a date to the earliest feeling of that languor which is shortly to become so extreme. The countenance gets pale, the whites of the eyes become pearly, the general frame flabby rather than wasted, the pulse perhaps large, but remarkably soft and compressible, and occasionally with a slight jerk, especially under the slightest excitement. There is an increasing indisposition to exertion, with an uncomfortable feeling of faintness or breathlessness in attempting it; the heart is readily made to palpitate; the whole surface of the body presents a blanched, smooth, and waxy appearance; the lips, gums, and tongue seem bloodless; the flabbiness of the solids increases; the appetite fails; extreme languor and faintness supervene; breathlessness and palpitations are produced by the most trifling exertion or emotion; some slight oedema is probably perceived about the ankles; the debility becomes extreme—the patient can no longer rise from his bed; the mind occasionally wanders; he falls into a prostrate and half-torpid state, and at length expires: nevertheless, to the very last, and after a sickness of several months' duration, the bulkiness of the general frame and the amount of obesity often present a most striking contrast to the failure and exhaustion observable in every other respect."68
68 Monograph on Disease of Suprarenal Capsules, p. 3.
The mode of onset is variable: in many cases there are etiological conditions, such as pregnancy, loss of blood, etc., which for weeks or months precede, and perhaps determine, the development of the anæmia. There may have been mental worry or shock, and after a prolonged period of ill-health the anæmic symptoms become marked. Failure of strength, lassitude and disinclination for exertion, with shortness of breath and palpitation and an increasing pallor, accompanied by headache, giddiness, and dyspepsia, are the symptoms for which the patient seeks advice.
The condition of the skin is remarkable in pronounced cases: the color is rarely a deep white or ashen, as in the pallor of fear or fainting or the bloodlessness from hemorrhage, but there is a peculiar lemon tint, a light straw-yellow or grayish-yellow color, which may be mistaken for a mild icterus. This is one of the most characteristic features of the disease.
The subcutaneous fat does not waste; on the contrary, the fatty panniculus may increase, and, as Addison remarked, there may be a bulkiness of the frame. Actual emaciation is very uncommon.
Slight oedema is present in the feet, particularly toward the close, and it may extend up the legs, but rarely reaches a high grade. Occasionally it may appear in the face and hands.
Cutaneous hemorrhages in the form of small petechiæ are liable to appear on the legs and arms, not often on the trunk.