Another complication following the prolonged sojourn of a tracheal tube—rare, it is true—is the development of a mass of granulation-tissue, a veritable tumor, which may occlude the lumen of the trachea and lead to serious disturbances of respiration. The growth usually occurs about the inner edges of the tracheal wound, extending thence inward and upward or downward, as the case may be, and is most frequently met with, perhaps, after tracheotomies undertaken for diphtheria, although it may occur as a result of the ulcerations mentioned above, and develop even from the cicatrix in an old and perfectly-closed tracheotomy wound. The size of the mass, its location, and the amount and manner of its interference with the respiratory current vary much, but the condition must ever be regarded as a troublesome, even dangerous, one, and may always be suspected when attempts at the removal of the canula temporarily or permanently are followed by sudden and urgent dyspnoea.

The exuberant granulation-tissue which forms about the outer edges of even a recent tracheotomy wound, and occasionally renders the reintroduction of the tube difficult, as well as closing the wound while it is out, is a much simpler matter, and is easily remedied by cutting it away with the scissors or checking its formation by caustic applications.

A subcutaneous emphysema not infrequently occurs as the result of poor surgery and delay at the time of introducing the tube into the windpipe, or may come on later when the tube fits the tracheal wound incompletely. In either case it need excite no apprehension, and usually quickly subsides. Cervical cellulitis is a more serious matter, but is fortunately rare if unconnected with disease of the cartilages of larynx or trachea. It probably depends upon injury to the tissues and a too extensive opening up of the intermuscular strata at the time of the operation. Should the complication arise, the tendency to the burrowing of pus must be prevented by free drainage and, if necessary, incisions. The other surgical indications are to be treated on general principles.

When the incision necessary for the introduction of a tracheotomy-tube has been made through healthy tissue, necrosis of the cartilage in contact with the tube belongs to the rarest of the complications of the operation. The simple traumatic perichondritis set up by the operation shows no tendency to eventuate in death of the parts. Equally rare is cicatricial contraction of the trachea as the direct result of the operation. That it may follow the healing of the extensive defects sometimes left by the syphilitic and other processes can readily be understood; and the same defects, involving as they occasionally do the loss of large amounts of tissue and destruction of important parts, may eventuate in the formation of an aërial fistula during or after the healing process is completed. The occurrence of such a fistulous opening as the result of a simple and uncomplicated tracheotomy wound could only be regarded as the evidence of unskilful surgery and after-treatment. The various plastic operations undertaken for the repair of such defects are described in the works on general surgery, notably in the able monograph of Schüller. Dislodgment of the canula out of the trachea as the result of an insufficiently long tube, or of neglect to fasten the tapes which hold it properly about the neck, so that it slips during coughing or the movements of the patient, is an accident which may not for the moment attract the attention of an inexperienced surgeon unless laryngeal dyspnoea is urgent. The patient breathes quietly, the air passing by the sides of the tube, which apparently is correctly placed. The simple test of ascertaining whether air be passing through the canula or not, or of making a trial whether the patient breathe as well when the finger closes the opening of the outer tube, as he will do if the tube is out of the trachea, will decide the question. Should the tube have slipped, it is of course at once to be replaced.

The breaking off of a portion of the inner canula, and the terminal piece falling down the trachea—several instances of which have been reported during recent years—is more apt to happen with the right-angled canula of Durham, the inner tube of which is necessarily made up of segments held by small rivets: these become in time loosened and the piece that they held detached. The outer tube of the hard-rubber canula also has become detached from its collar and dropped into the trachea. An occasional inspection of the condition of the tube is therefore desirable.

DISEASES OF THE BRONCHI.

BRONCHITIS, ACUTE AND CHRONIC; CATARRHAL; MECHANICAL; CAPILLARY; AND PSEUDO-MEMBRANOUS.

BY N. S. DAVIS, M.D., LL.D.