In several cases of cerebral hemorrhage in purpura, where the general character of the disease was shown by hemorrhages in other organs, fatty degeneration of the cerebral vessels has been found, together with extensive steatosis of the liver, kidneys, muscles, and heart.4 In a cerebral hemorrhage found in the brain of a girl of eleven the walls of the vessels were dotted with fat-globules and dark granules, and several of them studded with round and oval nuclei closely resembling the nuclei (small cells?) commonly found in tubercle. There was no trace of tubercle in any part of the body.5
4 Gazette hébdomadaire, May 12, 1876, p. 288.
5 Trans. Path. Soc., Cayley.
There is no possible means of determining in which way any given bleeding has arisen, except a very minute search, and this may fail to show the actual point of rupture. It seems highly probable, from the connection of some cases of hemorrhage with valvular disease of the heart, that embolism may give rise to effusions of blood, especially capillary and multiple ones. In such cases the emboli may be deposited in arteries far too small to be obvious in the ordinary process of dissection. (See Capillary Embolism.)
Hemorrhage arises in some rare cases from the backing up of blood in the veins when they are obstructed by thrombosis. A case has been described where meningeal and ventricular hemorrhage resulted from a rupture of the straight sinus at its juncture with the torcular Herophili.6
6 Mullar, Lancet, 1849, i. 607.
In many diseases like purpura, idiopathic anæmia, and leucocythæmia many hemorrhages may take place in the brain as well as elsewhere throughout the body. Their importance under these circumstances is usually not great.
The usual localities of cerebral hemorrhage are stated with much minuteness in the following table from Durand-Fardel, which, although not very recent (1854), is not the less accurate on that account. No subsequent statistics have essentially altered its most important conclusions. In 139 cases the hemorrhage was situated in the hemispheres 119 times; in the protuberance (pons), 21; in the cerebellum, 13; total, 153.
I have placed beside these a small number of cases from the records of the Boston City Hospital and my own practice, and, to avoid the multiplication of headings, have entered some multiple hemorrhages under two or more heads, so that from the whole number of cases (46) there are 81 entries: