Perichondritis and Chondritis of the Larynx.
DEFINITION.—Inflammation of the laryngeal perichondrium and cartilage.
SYNONYMS.—Phthisis laryngea of the older authors, Laryngitis affecting the cartilages, Deep-seated ulcerative laryngitis, Caries cartilaginum laryngis, Vomica laryngis, Perichondric laryngeal abscess, Necrosis laryngis. (Some of these names refer to the product or terminal stage of the disease.)
ETIOLOGY.—Laryngeal perichondritis and chondritis occur either as idiopathic or as symptomatic or secondary affections. Even the former, caused by so-called catching cold or exposure to cold and wet while the system is in a state of lowered vitality, may have a septicæmic basis; it is much more rare than the secondary. Rühle has remarked that arytenoid perichondritis may probably sometimes start in the crico-arytenoid articulation, and in an instance which has come under my observation this certainly seemed to have been the case. Authors state that occasionally the inflammation commences in the cartilaginous tissue itself, instead of in its investment; this is hardly conceivable. Perichondritis must always precede chondritis, but it always causes the cartilage to become involved in the morbid process. Quite often perichondritis and chondritis constitute an extension of a particular ulcerative disease of the mucous and elastic membranes. In the great majority of cases the causes are tuberculosis, syphilis, diphtheria, cancer, lupus, typhus and typhoid fever, small-pox, or else traumatic occurrences, especially suicidal throat-cutting, decubitus or other pressure upon the part—as, for instance, the frequent introduction in an aged subject of the oesophageal sound observed by Ziemssen, and overstrain of the voice alleged by Flormann. At least three cases are reported (viz. by Porter, Lawrence, and Eppinger) in which the disease has been ascribed to the administration of mercury, and Graves and Stokes remark that in broken-down constitutions, where large quantities of mercury have been used, chronic laryngitis is very apt to terminate in ulceration of the cartilages.
The disease occurs oftener in men than in women, and oftener between the twentieth and fortieth years than at any other age.
SYMPTOMATOLOGY.—I distinguish three stages of laryngeal perichondritis and chondritis—viz. the inflammatory, suppurative, and necrotic. The symptoms of the first stage are obscure: the main one is pain, usually of a boring, burning character, localized according to the precise cartilage affected, which is increased by functional or other movement of the part and by pressure from the outside. To the pain there are gradually added—also depending somewhat upon the precise seat of the inflammation—cough, dysphonia, and dysphagia. In cricoid perichondritis—especially when, as is generally the case, the posterior surface of the plate of the cricoid cartilage is affected—there is sometimes inflammatory reddening of the pharyngeal mucous membrane which may extend upward to the palate. Inflammatory swelling of some part of the cartilaginous framework may be recognizable in the first stage of the disease by means of the laryngoscope.
The suppurative stage is attended with more swelling of the part affected, due to accumulation of pus and to collateral oedema. Pain, dysphagia, or dysphonia, and sometimes irritative, harsh cough may be much augmented; but, above all, dyspnoea now appears, which sometimes so rapidly increases that the patient dies asphyxiated unless tracheotomy is performed.
During the necrotic stage the symptoms of laryngeal stenosis sometimes persist, and sometimes cease with the expectoration of quantities of pus containing possibly a part, and occasionally the altered whole, of the affected cartilage: with continued purulent expectoration the patient's strength fails, the breath becomes very fetid, and hectic fever and death may supervene.
Swelling of cervical lymphatic glands, though by no means always present, has been observed in the early and sometimes only in the later stages of the disease.
The course of the disease, whether idiopathic or secondary, is either acute or chronic. It tends either toward abscess-formation, which predominates, or toward new growth of tissue; for a time sometimes the one, sometimes the other occurs, and, as a rule, during the former the process is more acute, and during the latter more chronic: the proliferated tissue, after being produced, may break down and increase the amount of pus. When acute, the three stages of the disease follow each other rapidly, if, indeed, the third be not cut off by the death of the patient. When chronic, the pus collected is very apt to burrow and to make fistulous passages and openings internally and externally. At various points also perichondric hypertrophies, ecchondroses, and exostoses are apt to occur.