| FIG. 30. |
| Same case as Fig. 29: post-mortem appearance. |
The seat of tracheal ulcers is usually the posterior wall and the lower portion, unless the upper portion is affected by extension from the larynx or by pressure from a tracheotomy-tube. They are found also in other portions, and sometimes are so numerous that they give to the membrane a sieve-like appearance. Occasionally they denude some of the tracheal rings. In shape they vary, being mostly irregularly circular or oval, and excavated or scooped out; in size they vary from that of a pin's head to that of a marble. In tuberculosis they are generally small and numerous, have a pale background, and are occasionally confluent, while in syphilis they are usually isolated and large, very destructive, and apt to cause contractions or other deformities by partial or extensive cicatrization. Such contracting ray-like cicatrices have more than once produced fatal stenosis.
The SYMPTOMS are frequently obscure, but local pain and irritation are usually, purulent or muco-purulent sputa are sometimes, present. The diagnosis is difficult unless tracheoscopic examination reveals the condition. Fig. 27 shows the tracheoscopical image, and Fig. 28 the post-mortem appearance, of a case of tuberculous tracheal ulceration on the upper portion of the front wall, while Figs. 29 and 30 show the image during life and the appearance after death of a case of syphilitic ulceration. In Fig. 30 the posterior wall is seen with the ulcers, and below them a star-shaped cicatrix.
The PROGNOSIS generally depends upon the underlying disease, and is grave because the latter is. Perforation may take place, as well as cicatrization and hypertrophy, and either process may lead to a fatal issue. In a number of instances post-mortem examination has shown that tracheal ulceration may produce surprisingly great ravages before destroying life.
TREATMENT, like the prognosis, depends somewhat upon the disease underlying the ulceration. Pain is relieved by anodyne, and cicatrization promoted by alterative inhalations, as of nebulized glycerated solutions of morphine, ethereal solution of iodoform, iodinic preparations, oil of solidago, citronella oil, etc. Catarrhal ulcers heal without special treatment with the subsidence of the catarrhal inflammation. In syphilitic ulceration, stenosis from cicatrization is to be dreaded, and specific constitutional treatment is the main reliance. The internal administration of cod-liver oil has been found of service in nearly all cases of tracheal ulceration, especially in phthisis, lupus, etc. Appropriate general treatment must be combined with the local.
MORBID GROWTHS.
DEFINITION.—Tumors, benign or malignant, growing from the wall and projecting into the interior of the windpipe. Inversion of the mucous membrane forming a protrusion into the interior will be spoken of under the head of Stenosis; and tumors of other organs extending into the trachea, such as cancer of the oesophagus, lymphatic glands, thyroid body, etc., are excluded from consideration under the present head.
FREQUENCY OF OCCURRENCE.—Aside from post-tracheotomic granulation-tumors, which with careless tracheotomy or after-treatment occur often, the disproportion in the frequency of laryngeal and tracheal morbid growths is even greater than that of other laryngeal and tracheal affections. I have met with only eight instances of tracheal morbid growths, strictly so called, in a special practice during more than twenty-five years. This is exclusive of post-tracheotomic vegetations and tumors from contiguity.
ETIOLOGY.—Local irritations and chronic inflammatory conditions seem often, if not always, to be the forerunners of tracheal tumors, but the real cause of the latter is unknown. Recently it has been suggested (see the article on [LARYNGEAL TUMORS]) that the ever-present bacilli play a rôle in the production of morbid growths as well as in that of other diseases. As it is known that some parasitical organisms on plants use up their nidus very slowly, with the formation of peculiar excrescences, while others very rapidly destroy the tissue of their host, it would be easy to suppose that some such difference in the micro-organism causing the tumor determines its benign or malignant character.