Pulmonary Phthisis.

Not one hundredth part of pulmonary consumptions commence with hemorrhage. Phthisical lineaments are emaciation, diurnal hectic fever, obstinate rebellious cough, difficulty of breathing, and usually some change in the voice. In the beginning, phthisis often resembles a catarrh, or stubborn cold; and in this insidious disguise is too frequently slighted, or neglected: but continuing longer than the usual catarrhal period, without any considerable intermission, and especially if in summer, are sufficient grounds of alarm. In that, from tubercles, there is frequent teazing dry cough, exasperated at night; some difficulty of breathing, and panting on ascending any eminence or stairs, or on exercise; some emaciation and weakness. By degrees, there is more or less expectoration of viscid, yellow, greenish purulence, intermixed, however, with natural mucus, and in the progress streaked with blood. Sooner or later, uneasiness in the breast, inability to lay on one side, pain in the side, or under the sternum, and aggravated by inspiration and coughing.

The consuming hectic fever has generally two exacerbations during the twenty-four hours, about noon and night; with some degree of chilliness and shivering, and increased sensibility to cool air, notwithstanding the skin is preternaturally hot; the palms of the hands and soles of the feet burn; a florid redness, or circumscribed spot is perceivable in the cheeks; the other features are partial sweats about the neck and breast, particularly in the morning; disturbed sleep; slender, hoarse, and obscure voice; quick pulse; sometimes vomiting after meals; thirst; salt taste in the mouth; cough and expectoration, in frequency and quantity, varying in different persons; in some, there is a very considerable discharge of purulency from the lungs. Various ordeals have been proposed for the distinction of mucus from pus, or pulmonick ulceration. Mucus is naturally more transparent, viscid, and cohesive: pus always opake, more yellow and greenish; the odour more disagreeable, and the expectoration accompanied with a hectick fever. The sinking or swimming in water of the expectorated matter, is a precarious symptom, as it depends on the quantity of entangled air.

In this island, phthisis, especially from tubercles not suppurated, may continue one, two, or more years; appearing during the winter and spring, and disappearing during the summer. Other consumptions are much more rapid; in the vernacular phrase, galloping the patient to a skeleton in a few months. Phthisical patients are rarely confined to bed, until near the deplorable stages and fatal termination. Some have even a tolerable appetite; and the generality are cheered with adulatory hopes of recovery to the last extremity. The progressive encroachment is evident, by increased debility, emaciation, and partial sweats; edematous ancles; diarrhœa; depilation; consumption and melting away of the fat and muscular flesh: at last sapless, and macerated into ghosts, the twinkling vital snuff is extinguished. It is, as yet, impossible for me to apportion the comparative mortality and recovery in real confirmed phthisis; nor could I depend upon any of the general registers which I carefully consulted with this view. We may, however, venture upon a gross estimate, by negative proof. Exclusive of individual evidence, and medical attestation, we might, by a simple algebraic process out of any specified number, with their mortal diseases, and probable proportion of sick in each, sift out the consumptive. At all events, it cannot possibly be thought exaggeration to alledge, that not one out of seven consumptive recover. From hereditary entail, or tubercles, it is still more desperate.

Species of Consumption

are, hectick fever, atrophy and tabes; nervous; icterick; dorsal. Hectick fever and atrophy is described as a very frequent and fatal disease of infants, especially in cities; accompanied with emaciation, often short dry cough, hot skin and palms of the hands; quick pulse, thirst, diurnal exacerbations, sickly countenance: in some the abdomen is tense, tumid, and considerably enlarged. In simple atrophy the fever is not so acute; with tumid belly, irregular fecal discharge; voraciousness, indigestion, thirst, nocturnal sweats, unhealthy countenance. Atrophy and nervous tabes are confounded in medical diagnosticks: in both there is emaciation; but no considerable fever, cough, or difficulty of breathing; impaired appetite and digestion; leucophlegmatic sickly appearance, partial sweats; general debility, and proneness to faint on any exertion. Sometimes atrophy is circumscribed to a particular part or member. The icterick tabes is accompanied with symptoms of jaundice; and probably, under several disguises, is more frequent than medical authors have represented.

Dorsal, or spermatick, is a particular tabes; miserable spectacles of which are recorded by the celebrated Tissot. Its symptoms are, emaciation, yet good appetite; pain and weakness in the back and loins; disturbed sleep, and frequently interrupted by nocturnal dreams and pollution, either with or without pleasure; weakness of the knees and trembling of the muscles on the least exercise; sometimes a sensation as of thorns pricking the skin, and descending down the spine; pale sickly countenance, livid circle under the eye-lids; the feces and urine excreted with some difficulty, and often either with semen or prostate liquor. By degrees, the appetite decays with indigestion, hypochondriasm, melancholy; pains in various parts, headach, lumbago, universal debility, wasting of the penis, impotency and blight of future progeny. Females are not exempt from this disease; but it is much more frequent amongst the male sex, from the age of puberty through various adult stages of life: the foundation of it is often laid at schools; and in those seminaries of vice, large cities: and in some countries it is a more general habit of licentiousness than in others.

Of the predisposing and occasional causes of pulmonary hemorrhage, pulmonary phthisis, hectick, atrophy and tabes. Of pulmonary hemorrhage; hereditary; narrow thorax; weak pulmonary blood vessels, small capacity; plethora; suppressed natural or habitual hemorrhage, as nasal, hemorrhoidal, menstrual; amputation of a considerable extremity; luxurious living and indolence; violent exertion and exercise of the lungs and voice in various trades and professions; also violent efforts to cough, to exonerate the excretories; parturition; lifting great weights; violent exercise; furious passions of mind: external injuries on the thorax; wounds; confining the thorax by writing-desks, by strong whalebone stays; suppressed perspiration and exhalation of the skin and lungs by cold; light atmosphere, especially on high mountains; pulmonick inflammation; scrophulous lymphatick glands and tubercles in the lungs, or calculous concretions; polypus concretions in the large pulmonary blood-vessels; schirrus and obstruction in the abdominal viscera.