Digestive System.—Gastric symptoms are rarely absent in the form of oppression after eating, nausea, and vomiting; the latter may be an early and troublesome feature. The appetite is variable, and when the spleen is greatly enlarged the mechanical pressure is apt to cause uneasy feelings after eating.
Diarrhoea is common, and may come on very early in the disease (Case I.109), and it is a frequent cause of death. The stools are usually thin and catarrhal, not often dysenteric, but melæna occurs in many cases. The diarrhoea may be due to a dysenteric process in the colon (Case II.), and tenesmus may be present. It has not been noted that the diarrhoea is more frequent when the lymph-glands of the intestines are involved.
109 These figures refer to Montreal cases, some of which I saw with my colleague, Palmer Howard, others with John Bell, Lachapelle, and G. T. Ross.
The liver shows no alterations in the early stage, but as the disease advances it is almost invariably enlarged. Jaundice is not often present, but there may be recurrent attacks (Case II.), due either to catarrh of the ducts or to pressure of glands in the hilus. Ascites is a variable feature; a slight degree is not uncommon as part of a general dropsy dependent upon the blood-condition, but in some cases it is a prominent symptom and calls for frequent tappings (Case IX.). In some cases it is due to pressure of leukæmic growths in the branches of the portal vein or the liver, or of enlarged glands upon the trunk at the hilus. The ascites is not always hepatic; like the hæmatemesis and melæna, it may be of splenic origin and occur without any disturbance in the portal vein or liver. Leukæmic peritonitis has been met with.110
110 Willcocks, Proceedings of Conn. Med. Soc., 1874.
Nervous System.—Headache, dizziness, and attacks of fainting are common, and due chiefly to the anæmia. In some cases the headache is severe and persistent. The intelligence is well preserved; only toward the close is there rambling delirium. Mental disturbance may occur, and in one case the patient committed suicide. Some writers speak of special sadness and moroseness. This I have never noticed; on the contrary, in most of the cases I have seen the patients seemed specially tranquil and resigned. Coma may come on suddenly from cerebral hemorrhage (Case X.).
Sleep is not usually disturbed; some patients doze incessantly.
Special Senses.—Weak vision is often complained of, due to the anæmia, sometimes to the leukæmic retinitis. Blindness rarely supervenes, even when the retinal changes are extensive. Marked intolerance of light may be present.
The condition of the retina is variable. There may be simply turbidity and swelling of the retina, with large and tortuous veins, or more commonly with the opacity there are hemorrhages, such as occur in profound anæmia from any cause. A peculiarity, however, of the extravasations in some cases of leukæmic retinitis is the appearance produced by the aggregation of colorless corpuscles, often in the centre of the hemorrhage, so that there is a yellow or white nucleus and a zone of red. The collections of colorless corpuscles may indeed have the characters of small leukæmic growths. In one case (XI.) throughout the retinæ were numerous small raised opaque white bodies one to two millimeters in diameter, some of them surrounded by rings of extravasation. There was no swelling of the disk.
Deafness has been frequently observed, and may appear early. It was specially noted in the cases of Edes,111 Morrill,112 Seguin,113 and Pepper,114 and DaCosta.115 No satisfactory explanation has been given, and the suggestion that it is due to hemorrhage has not, so far as I know, been confirmed by autopsy. Noises in the ears may be very troublesome, and even be so bad as to disturb hearing and necessitate the writing of questions (Case XI.).