37 Revue méd. de Toulouse, xiv. 1880, 341.

38 Des Affections nerveuses-syphilitiques, Paris, 1862, p. 485.

In the cases of chronic brain syphilis which have come under my observation, most usually after a greater or less continuance of prodromes such as have been mentioned, epileptic attacks have occurred with a hemiplegia, or a monoplegia, which is almost invariably incomplete and usually progressive; very frequently diplopia is manifested before the epilepsy, and on careful examination is found to be due to weakness of some of the ocular muscles. Not rarely oculo-motor palsy is an early and pronounced symptom, and a marked paralytic squint is very common. Along with the development of these symptoms there is almost always distinct failure of the general health and progressive intellectual deterioration, as shown by loss of memory, failure of the power to fix the attention, mental bewilderment, and perhaps aphasia. If the case convalesce under treatment, the amelioration is gradual, the patient travelling slowly up the road he has come down. If the case end fatally, it is usually by a gradual sinking into complete paralysis, or the patient is carried off by an acute inflammatory exacerbation, or, as in two of my cases, amelioration may be rapidly occurring and a very violent epileptic fit produce a sudden fatal asphyxia. Death from brain-softening around the tumor is not infrequent, but a fatal apoplectic hemorrhage is rare.

The clinical varieties of cerebral meningeal syphilis are so polymorphic and kaleidoscopic that it is almost impossible to reduce them to order for descriptive purposes. Fournier separates them into the cephalic, congestive, epileptic, aphasic, mental, and paralytic, but scarcely facilitates description by so doing. Heubner makes the following types:

"1. Psychical disturbances, with epilepsy, incomplete paralysis (seldom of the cranial nerves), and a final comatose condition, usually of short duration.

"2. Genuine apoplectic attacks with succeeding hemiplegia, in connection with peculiar somnolent conditions, occurring in often-repeated episodes; frequently phenomena of unilateral irritation, and generally at the same time paralyses of the cerebral nerves.

"3. Course of the cerebral disease similar to paralytica dementia.”

In regard to these types, the latter seems to me clear and well defined, but contains those cases which I shall discuss under the head of Cortical Disease.

Meningeal syphilis as seen in this country does not conform rigidly with the other asserted types, although there is this much of agreement, that when the epilepsy is pronounced the basal cranial nerves are not usually paralyzed, the reason of this being that epilepsy is especially produced when the gummatous change is in the ventricles or on the upper cortex. In basal affections the epileptoid spells, if they occur at all, are usually of the form of petit mal; but this rule is general, not absolute. The apoplectic somnolent form of cerebral syphilis, for some reason, is rare in this city, and it seems necessary to add to those of Heubner's a fourth type to which a large proportion of our cases conform. This type I would characterize as follows:

4. Psychical disturbance without complete epileptic convulsions, associated with palsy of the basal nerves and often with partial hemiplegia.