The treatment which promises most in gelatinous and cystic goitre is either that practised by Gosselin or that by Morrell Mackenzie of London. The plan of Gosselin is to make a very small incision in the skin over the front of the tumor, in order to lessen the resistance to the introduction of a small trocar and canula, through the latter of which, after evacuating the cyst and washing it out with tepid water, he injects the tincture of iodine (fluidrachm j). This injection is allowed to remain about five minutes. Should its discharge be followed by a flow of blood, a second and even a third injection is made before withdrawing the canula. This operation does not materially differ from that practised by V. Dumreicher, except that this practitioner emptied the cyst with an aspirator previous to washing out the sac and injecting the iodine. The method of Mackenzie, however, has succeeded so well in practice that it is to be preferred both for efficiency and safety. In this plan perchloride of iron is substituted for iodine. One part of the iron is mixed with four parts of water, and after partially emptying the cyst with a trocar and canula at its most dependent part the fluid (fluidrachm j–fluidrachm ij) is thrown into the sac by a syringe. The canula is now plugged with a stopper that the injection may be retained. After three days the stopper is removed and the contents of the sac are allowed to flow out. In case the discharge proves to be bloody or serous, the injection is repeated; if, on the contrary, it exhibits signs of pus the iron solution is withheld, but the canula is permitted to remain, that free drainage may be maintained until the goitre has been destroyed by suppuration. During the presence of the instrument the affected part of the neck is covered by a flaxseed-meal poultice.

In gelatinous goitre, when the tumor is multilocular, after tapping and before injecting, I introduce through the canula a plunger, and by pushing it in different directions through the interior of the tumor break up the separating walls of the cysts, and thus open a way for the better diffusion of the injecting material. The plan of Mackenzie, destroying as it does the tumor by a slow chronic form of suppuration, and at the same time draining away the pus as it forms, greatly lessens the risk which might otherwise arise from diffused suppuration, bleeding, or sloughing. At the Copenhagen Congress, Mackenzie stated that he had by the method described treated 193 cases of goitre with only 2 fatal cases, the latter being those of a fibro-cystic form.

In making a comparison between the relative safety of perchloride of iron and of iodine as injections in goitre, the great superiority of the former over the latter is well brought out in the cases collected and analyzed by Schwalbe, 106 in number, for the cure of which iodine was used, death following in 5 cases and diffused suppuration in 22 cases.

When all measures fail to control the growth of a goitre, and the life of the patient is jeopardized from the effects of pressure, the case ceases to be a medical one and must be relegated to the domain of surgery. Fortunately, the necessity for operation rarely occurs. It may be remarked, in closing this article, that the excision of the gland has been followed in several instances by evils greater than those for which the operation was performed. The experiments of Zesas and Horsley on lower animals, and the observations of Kocher after the removal of the thyroid in man, place the question of extirpation of goitre among the unsettled problems of surgery.

SIMPLE LYMPHANGITIS.

BY SAMUEL C. BUSEY, M.D.


ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY.—The pathological relations of the absorbent system are important, because of their direct connection with the morbid processes and structural changes taking place in a variety of diseases; therefore, before discussing the subject of lymphangitis, a brief reference to the anatomy and physiology of the lymphatic system is necessary.