26 Parrot adds: “In the new-born in a state of health great difficulty is experienced in separating the jaws, the muscles that bring them together having, relatively, considerable power, and the infants making quite an active resistance when one attempts to separate them. It follows that when a pathological state exaggerates this tendency it may be thought that we have to do with a veritable trismus.”
Though there is at times a prodromal period of restlessness and fretfulness, usually the disease is first indicated by an inability to nurse, the nipple being eagerly seized upon, but quickly dropped—an action that may be regarded as almost pathognomonic. Swallowing, difficult from the first, soon becomes impossible. The lower jaw in the earlier hours in many cases is dropped, but nearly always well-marked trismus is more or less quickly developed, at first intermittent, but later persistent. Opisthotonos in some degree is almost certain to be present, and in a large proportion of cases the tetanic convulsions become generalized, clonic exacerbations occurring as often as every half hour or hour, and capable of being induced at any time by pressure upon the abdomen (Morrison), or indeed by any external irritation, noise, touch, draft of air, etc.
All observers have noticed the peculiar cry, or rather whine, of the little patient. The bowels have in some cases been constipated, in others diarrhœa has been present. The temperature is generally decidedly elevated, and has been known to reach 111.2° F. Usually in from twelve to twenty-four or thirty-six hours collapse occurs, and the child speedily dies; though the fatal result may be deferred for a number of days or suddenly produced at any moment by spasm of the respiratory muscles.
Upon autopsy there has generally been found hyperæmia of the brain and cord with extravasations (commonly perithecal) in the spinal canal, occasionally in the meninges of the brain and in the ventricles. Very probably, as in true tetanus, these vascular conditions are the effect, and not the cause, of the spasms; and sometimes, doubtless, they are hypostatic.
As usually observed and commonly treated, the PROGNOSIS is very bad. Whether occurring in India or in Iceland, in the Rotunda Hospital in Dublin or in the Foundling Hospital in St. Petersburg, in the negro cabins of our Southern States or in New York or Washington, the subjects of it almost always die, generally in from six to forty-eight hours.27 It has been very exceptional to have 20 per cent.28 of recoveries, or even 15;29 and the non-fatal cases have almost invariably been those in which the disease appeared late and in mild form.
27 80 per cent. of the cases collected by Hartigan (207—165).
28 8 out of 40 cases tabulated by Smith; 8 out of 42 in the Stockholm Lying-in Hospital in 1834. It is very probable that these latter were cases of infantile meningitis.
29 5 out of 34 cases reported by Wallace from the Medical College Hospital of Calcutta.
When treated by manipulation and position, as recommended by Marion Sims, the chances of recovery seem to be very much greater. Even in the acute cases under the care of Sims, of Wilhite, and of Hartigan, death occurred only in those seen late, after extravasations had taken place.
The Sims's method consists simply in releasing the overlapped occipital bone by manipulation (or, if that fails, by an operation), and then placing the child so that the head shall rest flat upon its side, the face looking directly toward the horizon. The success attending this postural treatment has been so remarkable that the practitioner cannot be justified in failing to determine the relative positions of the occipital and parietal bones and to keep the head resting upon its side.