34 Ibid.

35 Revue de Méd., 1882, ii. 678.

This citation of cases might be much extended, but is sufficient to show that nervous syphilis occurs not very rarely within six months after infection, and may be present in two months.

Gummatous Brain Syphilis.

CLINICAL HISTORY.—Brain syphilis of the type now under consideration may declare itself with great suddenness. An apoplectic attack, a convulsive paroxysm, a violent mania, or a paralytic stroke may be the first detected evidence of the disease. In most of these cases the coming storm ought to have been foreseen, and to a greater or less degree averted. The onset of cerebral syphilis is, however, generally more gradual, the symptoms coming on slowly and successively. Proper treatment, instituted at an early stage, is usually successful, so that a careful study of these prodromes is most important. They are generally such as denote cerebral disturbance, and, although they should excite suspicion, are not diagnostic, except as occurring in connection with a specific history or under suspicious circumstances.

Headache, slight failure of memory, unwonted slowness of speech, general lassitude, and especially lack of willingness to mental exertion, sleeplessness or excessive somnolence, attacks of momentary giddiness, vertiginous feelings when straining at stool, yelling or in any way disturbing the cerebral circulation, alteration of disposition,—any of these, and, a fortiori, several of them, occurring in a syphilitic subject, should be the immediate signal of alarm, and lead to the examination of the optic discs, for in some cases the eye-ground will be found altered even during the prodromic stage. Of course if choked disc be found the diagnosis becomes practically fixed, but the absence of choked disc is no proof that the patient is free from cerebral syphilis. In regard to the individual prodromic symptoms, my own experience does not lend especial importance to any one of them, although, perhaps, headache is the most common. There is one symptom which may occur during the prodromic stage of cerebral syphilis, but is more frequent at a later stage—a symptom which is not absolutely characteristic of the disease, but which, when it occurs in a person who is not hysterical, should give rise to the strongest suspicion. I refer to the occurrence of repeated, partial, passing palsies. A momentary weakness of one arm, a slight drawing of the face disappearing in a few hours, a temporary dragging of the toe, a partial aphasia which appears and disappears, a squint which to-morrow leaves no trace, may be due to a non-specific brain tumor, to miliary cerebral aneurisms, or to some other non-specific affection; but in the great majority of cases where such phenomena occur repeatedly the patient is suffering from syphilis or hysteria.

The first type or variety of the fully-formed syphilitic meningeal disease to which attention is here directed is that of an acute meningitis. I am much inclined to doubt whether an acute syphilitic meningitis can ever develop as a primary lesion—whether it must not always be preceded by a chronic meningitis or by the formation of a gummatous tumor; but it is very certain that acute meningitis may develop when there have been no apparent symptoms, and may therefore seem to be abrupt in its onset. Some years ago I saw, in consultation, a man who in the midst of apparent health was attacked by violent meningeal convulsions, with distinct evidences of acute meningitis. He was apparently saved from death by very heroic venesection, but after his return to consciousness developed very rapidly a partial specific hemiplegia, showing that a latent gumma had probably preceded the acute attack. On the other hand, an acute attack is liable at any time to supervene upon a chronic syphilitic meningitis. At the University Hospital dispensary I once diagnosed chronic cerebral syphilis in a patient who the next day was seized with violent delirium, with convulsions and typical evidences of acute meningitis, and died four or five days afterward. At the autopsy an acute meningitis was found to have been engrafted on a chronic specific lesion of a similar character. In the case reported by Gamel,36 in which intense headache, fever, and delirium came on abruptly in an old syphilitic subject and ended in general palsy and death, the symptoms were found to depend upon an acute meningitis secondary to a large gumma.

36 Tumeurs gommeuses du Cerveau, Inaug. Diss., Montpellier, 1875.

In this connection may well be cited the observation of Molinier37 in which violent delirium, convulsions, and coma occurred suddenly. A very curious case is reported by D. A. Zambaco38 in which attacks simulating acute meningitis occurring in a man with a cerebral gummatous tumor appear to have been malarial. In such a case the diagnosis of a malarial paroxysm could only be made out by the presence of the cold stage, the transient nature of the attack, its going off with a sweat, its periodical recurrence, and the therapeutic effect on it of quinine.