During youth it is the genital glands which predominate over the others; they seem to be a centre whence go irradiations that animate the whole machine. We might say most often that they are, in the mechanism of our moral actions, the spring which puts every thing in motion.
As we recede from youth, the influence of the genital glands becomes weaker, because they are in less activity. Towards the thirty-sixth or fortieth year, it is especially the glands destined to digestion which predominate over the others, and among these the liver in particular seems to be in activity. Then the bilious affections are predominant; then the passions to which the bilious temperament seems to dispose us, more frequently agitate the mind. Ambition, hatred and jealousy are often the sad attendants of this age. These passions are then more durable. The levity of youth and the passions arising from the influence of the genital glands, which predominate at this age, had for a time suppressed these, or rather had prevented them from being developed. Then they remain alone, the others having escaped in smoke with the fire of youth. Then also the influence of the lively emotions of the mind affects especially the glands and the abdominal viscera. Then is felt that contraction at the epigastric region, the painful effect of the bad passions; jaundice occasioned by sorrow is then more frequent.
This age is that of the organic affections of the glands, of all the numerous changes of texture, of all the excrescences which destroying as it were the nature of these organs, transform them into bodies of a different texture. In infancy, leucophlegmasia is most often produced by an engorgement of those lymphatic bunches that are called glands, which resembles tabes mesenterica, the engorgement of the bronchial glands, &c. In the adult on the contrary, it is with the diseases of the liver, of the spleen, of the kidneys, that it is most often seen.
IV. State of the Glandular System in Old Age.
In old age, the glands become more firm and hard. Before that period even, the glandular system of animals ceases to be used at our tables. The liver, the kidneys, the spleen, &c. are mixed with the fleshy texture in common boiled meat, only to communicate to it some salts, some savoury principles that are foreign to this texture. They are not eaten, or at least they are not agreeable to the taste. The lungs which contain so great a quantity of mucous glands, do not afford a very digestible aliment except those of the calf; those of the ox are not brought to our tables, especially when the animal is old. I would observe upon this subject that the muscular and glandular systems are in an inverse order as it respects digestion, at least in the stewed state to which they are reduced for nourishment. In fact, the glandular system has not an agreeable taste and is not very digestible except in young animals, whilst at this age the muscular is insipid, and does not become savoury food till towards the middle of life.
In extreme old age, the colour of the glands changes less than that of most of the other organs. We find the liver, the kidneys, &c. almost as full of blood as in the adult; they are as red, whilst the muscles pale and colourless announce by their appearance that but little blood enters them at the latter periods of life. We might say that this fluid first abandons the skin and the muscles of animal life which in the trunk are subjacent to it, and which in the extremities are found very distant from the heart, or at least that it diminishes much in the two systems, and is concentrated in the organs in the neighbourhood of the heart; thus the secretions are still very abundant in old people, whilst the muscular, nervous forces, &c. are considerably weakened. The kidneys still secrete much urine; the liver pours out much bile, though this gland loses in part the kind of predominance it exercised in the economy towards the fortieth year. We know that the very frequent catarrhs that then take place, indicate an increase of action in the mucous glands. The functions of the testicles and mammæ have long since ceased.
The activity of the glands remaining in exercise, appears to be owing to two causes. 1st. The decomposition being very great at this age, many substances are presented to the glands to be thrown out. An old person decreases by a phenomenon opposite to the rapid growth of the fœtus, in which the glandular system throws out scarcely any thing from the economy. 2d. The skin having the horny hardness and being contracted, ceasing in part to be an emunctory of the products of decomposition, the glands supply the place of these functions. The cutaneous and glandular systems are then in the same relation as in winter and in cold countries, in which, we have seen, that the second constantly supplies the place of the first.
In general, the glandular system is one of those in which life is the most slowly extinguished. In the dead bodies of old people we find the bile still filling the gall-bladder, the bladder full of urine, &c. All the glands when compressed, the prostate itself, permit a large quantity of fluid to escape from their excretories. I have even observed that in this compression, we uniformly press out more fluid in an old subject than in a young one. The older the animals are, the more their kidneys, as we know, preserve the urinous smell. The lungs, which abound so much in mucous surfaces and consequently in mucous glands, are not withered and have not the horny hardening in old age; they perform their functions as regularly as in youth.
In general it is a very remarkable phenomenon that all the principal internal organs, the liver, the kidneys, the spleen, the heart, the lungs, &c. still preserve a very considerable vital force, whilst the sensitive and locomotive organs already almost exhausted, have broken in part the communications which connect the individual with the objects which surround him.