The predisposing and occasional causes of irregularity of the lochia, and of uterine inflammation, are, of Excess, grumous clots of blood in the womb; violence done to the womb during parturition; retention of the placenta, or part of it; great weakness; passions of mind; a second child; spasm; repulsion of milk from the breasts; too early and violent motion or walking about; diseased state of the womb; inverted womb; errors in food, drink, passions of mind, excretions, &c. Of Obstruction and Suppression; clots of blood in the vagina; cold admitted to the naked body, either externally or internally; cold rooms, cloaths, and drink; obstructed perspiration; impure air and close heated rooms; passions of mind; hystericks; errors in the non-naturals, diarrhœa. Of inflammation of the womb, suppression of the lochia; external violence; falls; rude extraction of the placenta; morbid adhesion of the placenta; miscarriage; too tight bandages round the belly: its termination is by discussion or gangrene.
Puerperal Fever,
or Peritonitis, commonly alledged to be peculiar to women after delivery, has been dignified by the moderns, from its danger and fatality, with a generic name: happily for the fair sex, it does not often occur: sometimes it is epidemic, from some unknown quality of the atmosphere; and in such circumstances a considerable number of puerperal women are afflicted at the same time. It generally attacks one or two days, but sometimes a few hours after delivery; and rarely later than the sixth day. The assault is sudden and violent, with shivering, headach, especially in the temples and eyes, giddiness, nausea, sickness of the stomach, and vomiting of bile in large quantity, pains darting through the lower region of the abdomen, and reaching up to the stomach, with extreme sensibility and tenderness, on being pressed with the hand, or by coughing or vomiting: the pain is felt between the stomach and navel, and is higher than in the inflammation of the womb; there is unusual languor and weakness, anxiety, oppression, and load of the spirits, impaired strength, so as not to be able to render themselves any assistance in bed; no refreshing sleep, sometimes delirium; the pulse is always extremely rapid, but various in strength during the revolution of the febrile paroxisms, that is, of the cold and hot fit. When the vomiting abates, it is succeeded by a profuse diarrhœa, accompanied with colick, tormenting gripes, tenesmus. In some, the abdomen begins to swell early. At the beginning the symptoms have an inflammatory appearance; but after a very few days change undisguisedly into the nervous and putrid type, and sometimes with miliary eruption. Often neither the lochial discharge, nor the milk, are interrupted; and it has been observed to ensue even after easy labours.
The puerperal Fever will be affected and diversified by different constitutions and temperaments, whether robust, plethoric, or delicate; by the quantity of the lochial discharge, the putrid atmosphere in the sick room, the medical treatment, the state of the atmosphere and seasons, and morbid quality of the prevailing febrile epidemick. Between five and fifteen days terminates the event in recovery or death. It is always most fatal when most epidemick, and the sooner it attacks after delivery. In some of our London hospitals, one half of the women ill of this fever have died; in others, one of seven. The crisis by discussion is followed by diarrhœa, by a serous or purulent transudation from the omentum or mesentery, into the abdomen; and from this cause sometimes consumption and dropsy. Some, even after a favourable crisis, have recovered slowly. When gangrene is the direful event, it is commonly within four or six days from the attack, and is known by the usual symptoms.
The predisposing and occasional causes are, a peculiar noxious constitution of the atmosphere; errors in the non-naturals; anxiety of mind; hot cordial regimen; heated unventilated rooms after delivery, and impure air; hence miliary eruptions and profuse sweats. The immediate cause is generally ascribed to inflammation of the omentum, mesentery, or peritoneum, and the sudden contraction of the womb after delivery, dragging and tearing down with it these membranes. But it merits the most serious and mature investigation, whether to employ the remedies accommodated to inflammatory, or to nervous and putrid fever. We know that purulency in the abdomen and thorax is likewise found in the putrid fever of the West Indies.
After-Pains; Weed, Milk-Fever; Inflammation of the Breasts,
are far less formidable foes than the preceding. After parturition, women are sometimes afflicted for some days with pains resembling colick; both in torture and severity extremely harassing. The causes are, the continued and sudden contraction of the womb towards its natural dimensions; fragments of the placenta or membranes, or of clotted blood in the womb; injuries done to the fibres of the womb during parturition; violent extension of the suspensory ligaments; inflammation and irritation of the womb, or its neck: tender state of the intestines; flatulence; flatulent food; suppression of the lochia; errors in the non-naturals; a second child. Weed, or ephemera, sometimes occurs, and is the most simple and innocent species of fever; it is preceded by lassitude, slight wandering pains; a succession of shivering, heat and sweat, resembling an intermittent paroxism; and in the space of a few hours, or at the utmost days, the fever disappears. The causes are some errors in the non-naturals. Milk fever: during pregnancy and parturition the breasts sympathize greatly with the womb. This natural fever begins three or four days after delivery, with shivering and heat, pain, distention and throbbing of the breasts, shooting to the armpits, restlessness; after twenty-four hours, commonly terminating by sweat, diarrhœa, eruption of milk: the usual quantity of this nutritive fluid is from two to three pints daily. In the preceding puerperal stage, inflammation of one, but rarely of both breasts, is a frequent affliction, varying in degree and severity: its symptoms are local redness and swelling, burning heat, extreme tenderness, throbbing; and is terminated by discussion, frequently by suppuration; sometimes by scirrhus. The causes are impetuous rush of milk to the breasts; excess of milk; not suckling; milk obstructed in the breasts or lactiferous tubes; suckling too soon; obstructed lochia; cold and obstructed perspiration.