The disease is rare in America—apparently much more so than in England.
SYMPTOMS.—In the words of Addison, the leading and characteristic symptoms are: "Anæmia, general languor and debility, remarkable feebleness of the heart's action, irritability of the stomach, and a peculiar change of color in the skin occurring in connection with a diseased condition of the suprarenal capsules."
Although, perhaps, not the most essential, the symptoms pertaining to the skin are in the majority of cases the most prominent, and have given rise to the names bronzed skin, melasma suprarenale, etc. which have been applied to the disease. A gradual increase in the pigment of the rete mucosum, either patchy or diffuse, causes a gradual discoloration, which may ultimately reach such a degree that a previously blonde individual may have the aspect of a Malay or a mulatto. The grades of coloration may range from a light yellow to a deep brown, or even black. In some instances there is a greenish-brown tinge, to which the term bronzed is peculiarly applicable. In typical cases it is diffuse over the whole surface, but as a rule deeper on exposed parts, face, neck, and hands, and also in those regions where the normal pigmentation is most intense, nipples, scrotum, and penis, or in the vicinity of cicatrices or regions of chronic irritation. It is usually first noticed on the face, either diffuse or in spots, and the extension may be rapid or gradual, in many instances not reaching a high grade and not becoming universal. It may be absent, and is not to be regarded—as was formerly the case—as an essential feature of the disease. Patches of leucoderma may occur in connection with the pigmentation, as beautifully delineated in Pl. xi. of Addison's monograph. The pigmentation is not confined to the skin, but may extend to the mucous surfaces—mouth, conjunctivæ, vagina. In the mouth the patches may be as dark as in the dog; they are usually scattered, often on the margins of the lips and on the edges and under surface of the tongue and on the cheeks. The conjunctivæ are less often affected. The vagina may be very deeply pigmented. An intensification of the choroidal pigment has been observed. In some cases a patchy pigmentation of the serous membranes has been found, and is figured in one of Addison's original plates, and pigmentation of the nails, hair, and teeth may also occur. A variation has been observed in the intensity of the coloration with the general health of the patient. The discoloration rarely precedes the general symptoms, but more usually follows the asthenia.
Some observers have noted a peculiar odor of the breath and from the skin, particularly during the last few days of life.
Anæmia of a moderate degree may exist, but it is not, as often stated, a constant symptom. Greenhow states that "there is no real anæmia, the blood being often rich in red corpuscles, even in excess, and there is no increase in the white." No special alterations in the appearance of the corpuscles have been noted. In some instances free pigment has been found.188 In a case recently at the hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Hughes found the number of red corpuscles over five millions per cubic millimeter, and there were free pigment-granules in the blood.
188 Corput, Gazette hébdomadaire, 1863.
Hemorrhages are rare; extravasations into the retinæ have not, so far as I can ascertain, been observed, nor are there often the other common features of anæmia.
The pulse is frequent and small, the heart's action weak—sounds clear; a venous murmur may sometimes be heard. In some cases there appears to be a special enfeeblement of the heart and a liability to fainting attacks, and without any warning a fatal syncope may occur. Cold feet and hands result from the weak circulation, and may be a most annoying symptom.
Symptoms in connection with the respiratory system are not common. There may be dyspnoea, and the complication of phthisis may give rise to all the features of that disease. There may, however, be extensive lung trouble with but few symptoms. The temperature is rarely elevated, more often it is subnormal.
Gastric disturbances are very common—anorexia, nausea, vomiting—particularly toward the close, but they may be early and prominent features, persisting in spite of all remedies and proving the most formidable symptoms of the malady. They appear to be of nervous origin, and not referable to changes in the organ itself. It is doubtful if the case reported by Gilliam,189 in which there was degeneration of the gastric mucosa, was Addison's disease. The state of the bowels is variable; constipation is more frequent than the normal condition. Diarrhoea is common, and may come on suddenly without obvious cause, and is a not infrequent cause of death.