I have intentionally omitted the early symptoms and course of rectal ulcer for the purpose of giving audience to Dr. A. C. Hall, who, in a communication to a medical journal, writes the following lucid description:
“Rectal ulcer is a more common disease than is generally supposed. Unfortunately the symptoms are generally obscure, and the patient suffers but very little, if any pain, and consequently consults his physician for some of the reflex symptoms, rather than for the initial disease itself; and very often these reflex symptoms are vainly treated till the patient and physician are both thoroughly disgusted and disheartened. There is one maxim which every physician should always bear in mind, and that is, always suspect rectal ulcer in every case of protracted or chronic diarrhœa. I have reports from eighty-six pension surgeons, in which they estimate that they have examined two thousand cases, where chronic diarrhœa was the alleged cause of disability in applicants for pensions. Of these two thousand cases of chronic diarrhœa, eighty-seven per cent. had rectal ulcers, and fully ninety per cent. of those who claimed chronic diarrhœa as their disability and who had no ulceration were rejected, because their proofs of the disease, aside from the ulceration were too meagre. Thus the strongest and most prominent symptom of rectal ulcer is chronic diarrhœa.
“The diarrhœa is generally more troublesome in the morning. The patient often on arising feels an urgent desire to go to stool. This act is often very unsatisfactory, for he passes very little feces and a great deal of wind. Occasionally these small stools are covered with a jelly-like, or white of an egg substance, or the motion may be only a jelly-like mucous, with no feces. There is generally more or less tenesmus, or a disagreeable feeling, as if the rectum was imperfectly evacuated. Sometimes the patient will be compelled to go out two or three times before breakfast, and he may in the later attempts to have a stool, pass lumpy or scybalous feces, covered with mucous, and often streaked with blood. There sometimes exists, as a symptom of rectal ulcer, a desire to go to stool when cold drinks are taken. But generally the diarrhœa and tenesmus subside soon after breakfast, and the patient has no more trouble until the next morning. A great many, or I might say a majority of those suffering from rectal ulcer consult the physician for some symptom or other that suggests anything else but the rectum, but by close questioning, and following up the symptoms, one can soon tell whether they are reflex or otherwise.
“In cases of rectal ulcer of long standing, there is always more or less cachexia, or peculiar waxy, sallow, unhealthy complexion, which sometimes alone points significantly towards the disease.
“There is often more or less enlargement of the liver and spleen, especially the spleen.
“In advanced cases, the diarrhœa comes on at night as well as morning, and defecation is accompanied with pain and griping. Another almost characteristic sign of rectal ulceration, is alternating diarrhœa and constipation. The bowels remain constipated for a considerable while, then diarrhœa supervenes, and is accompanied by severe and excruciating colicky pains, and often nausea. Persons subject to chronic diarrhœa always dread to take a physic to relieve a temporarily constipated state, for it will almost invariably put them to bed.
“In extreme cases, infiltration and thickening of the sub-mucous and muscular coats supervene, as a result of nature’s effort to repair the lost tissue. This thickening may be so extensive as to threaten and actually produce stricture. It will often convert the rectum into a passive tube, through which feces and fluids trickle, the patient having little or no control over the sphincters.
“The passage of hardened feces and the pressure of internal hemorrhoids and polypi are the most common causes of rectal ulceration. The lodgment of foreign bodies, such as fish bones, cherry stones and plum seeds that have been swallowed, and which act as irritants and produce ulceration.
“In women the pressure of the fœtal head on the rectum during childbirth is a frequent cause of ulceration, likewise the pressure of a misplaced uterus.
“On examination, by means of a speculum, the ulceration will be found about an inch or an inch and a half from the anus, generally on the posterior wall, but often on the anterior wall.