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Text book of veterinary medicine, Volume 3 (of 5) cover

Text book of veterinary medicine, Volume 3 (of 5)

Chapter 279: CUTANEOUS HEMORRHAGE: BLOODY SWEAT: HÆMATIDROSIS. HÆMATOPEDESIS.
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Comprehensive clinical manual detailing disorders of the nervous, genitourinary, ocular, and integumentary systems in domestic animals. It begins with principles of neural control and general symptomatology, classifying motor, sensory, and psychic disturbances and methods for localizing lesions. The text describes specific conditions such as seizures, paralysis, meningitis, intracranial hemorrhage, tumors, and toxicoses, and outlines diagnostic signs and pathological causes. Later sections address urine analysis and renal disease, urinary tract inflammation and calculi, and diseases of the eye, skin, and constitutional systems, combining pathological description with clinical signs, differential diagnosis, and practical guidance for examination and interpretation.

CUTANEOUS HEMORRHAGE: BLOODY SWEAT: HÆMATIDROSIS. HÆMATOPEDESIS.

Forms of cutaneous hæmorrhage; in specific diseases; in parasitism; in insect bites; in congestions of sweat glands; in deranged innervation; in hæmophilia. Section of sympathetic. Salt on sciatic. Hysteria. Sclerosis of cord. Inflammation. Symptoms: drops, crusts. Hæmorrhagic nodules. Treatment: styptics, cold, ice, snow, tannin, matico, iron chloride, alum, gelatine, atropine, ergot, lead acetate, quinia. Gravitation.

The escape of the blood by the skin is seen in a variety of morbid conditions, due it may be to profound changes in the blood and capillary walls, as in petechial fever, anthrax, scorbutus, septicæmia, swine erysipelas, etc., in which this is only a subsidiary phenomenon of a general disorder:—to the presence of parasites (Filaria hæmorrhagica,) in the skin:—to insect bites:—to violent congestions implicating the sweat glands (bloody sweat):—or to deranged innervation of the part as in cases of trauma of the sympathetic or sciatic nerve, or disease of the nerve centres. It may further be a manifestation of hæmophilia in which any slight lesion becomes the occasion of persistent hæmorrhage.

Cases that appear in the course of specific contagious diseases and those dependent on filaria will be considered under these headings, and we may confine our attention here to the forms of sweating and oozing of blood from independent causes. German writers draw attention to its frequency in eastern horses, attributing it to the great development of the vascular system especially of the skin, but its comparative infrequency in the English racer and American trotter would throw doubt on this doctrine. It may be questioned whether the frequency of the disease in Oriental horses is not to be ascribed rather to filariasis. This idea is not contradicted by the especial prevalence of the bleeding in summer when the filaria is most active, but when also the skin is the most vascular and its tissues most relaxed.

Of nervous hæmorrhages we have the experimental examples of Bouchard and Simon from section of the sympathetic nerve in animals, also those of Glen and Mathieu from irritation of the sciatic in dogs with common salt. In man the nervous causation has been seen in hysteria, under profound nervous shock, in sclerosis of the cord, and even as the result of auto-suggestion. This influence is constantly operative in violent inflammations in which diapedesis and minute hæmorrhages into the affected tissues are marked phenomena, and under such a cause the gland ducts especially are the seat of transudation. When the skin is abraded, cracked, or blistered it occurs also on the surface of the exposed derma.

Symptoms. With active local congestion or inflammation the blood usually oozes in drops from the surface, and drying concretes into dark red crusts. In other instances, however, it drops from the surface, or even flows, producing anæmia and even death. Into such cases hæmophilia presumably enters. Hæmorrhagic swellings like wheat kernels or beans also form in the skin.

Treatment. Apart from the contagious and parasitic diseases, and scurvy, the general treatment will be styptic. Cold water, ice, snow, a stream from a hose, solutions of tannin, matico, iron chloride or sulphate, alum or gelatine may be employed. Internally the iron salts, gelatine, atropine, ergot, lead acetate, or quinia may be given. In hæmophilia the gelatine especially should be tried both locally and generally. When it is possible, as in the case of the head, gravitation should be availed of. Elsewhere a compress bandage may be used.