PLATE IV
FIG. 1
Anthrax Bacilli. Spore Formation. (Karg and Schmorl.)
From an agar culture twenty-four hours old. About the margin of the photograph are a number of free spores, × 600.
FIG. 2
Anthrax Pustule. Removed from Arm of Man. (Karg and Schmorl.)
Marked edema of the skin, causing elevation and separation of the papillæ. In the edematous exudate a large number of anthrax bacilli and leukocytes. × 50.
Anthrax bacilli may enter the body through the respiratory organs, through any abraded surface, and possibly even through the alimentary canal. They may also pass through the placenta and affect the fetus in utero. They are too large to pass through the walls of the capillaries of ordinary size; consequently they plug them and produce a mechanical stasis which is rapidly followed by gangrene. From the kidney structures and capillaries, however, they may escape, as bacilli are found in the urine in certain cases of anthrax. (See Plate IV.)
In man the disease occurs usually as the so-called malignant pustule, or woolsorters’ disease, the latter name being given because of the liability of those individuals who come in contact with the carcasses and hides of diseased animals or their immediate products. The period of incubation is brief—on the average two or three days. The first lesion appears usually on the face, hands, or arms, and is characterized by local discomfort with formation of a small papule, which rapidly becomes a vesicle with an areola of cellulitis about it. This is rapidly followed by induration and infiltration, and these by local gangrene, the result being the separation of a core-like mass, similar to that of carbuncle. The affected area is usually discolored, often quite black. The process is not usually accompanied by suppuration, nor is there the pain of true carbuncle. The lesions tend to spread peripherally, but there is more or less vesication of the surrounding skin. On account of the local ischemia there will always be edema of the affected region, and sometimes the swelling and local disturbance become extreme. These peculiar lesions have given rise to the common name malignant pustule, which is well deserved. At last a line of demarcation becomes manifest, and if the disease progresses favorably the included area is sloughed out, leaving a surface which it is hoped will soon become covered with reasonably healthy granulations.
Absence of pain, and usually of pus, are significant features of anthrax. Should mixed infection occur, however, we are likely to see pus formation. When the disease partakes less of the characteristics of malignant pustule and more of a general infection, the local symptoms may not predominate, but, on the contrary, septic indications may become serious and even fatal. The evidence of more or less toxemia is usually at hand, however, and the toxin of anthrax is almost as destructive of muscle cell integrity as is that of diphtheria.
The local lesions may be single or multiple, but will be met with almost always upon exposed areas of the body.
—These will depend upon the clinical course of the disease. In the sloughing tissues the bacilli are very numerous, while around the margin more than one bacterial form will probably be met—i. e., mixed infection. Should saprophytic organisms complicate the case, they may have replaced the anthrax bacilli by the time the examination is made. The latter abound, however, in the blood, and may usually be found occluding the capillaries of the liver, spleen, kidney, etc. In intestinal infection, particularly in animals, the mesenteric nodes are involved. Inasmuch as septic features accompany all fatal cases, putrefaction will be found to begin early, and the changes in the blood and the gross changes in the other organs will resemble sepsis rather than anthrax.
—Prognosis for man is not usually unfavorable, the majority of cases recovering with more or less local destruction of tissue. Should, however, infection become generalized, the case will probably terminate fatally. Cases assuming the type of splenic fever are of much more serious character, and their prognosis graver.
—This should be both local and constitutional. The former should consist of the most radical possible attack and include complete excision of the infected area, with the use of active caustics or the actual cautery. In fact, the latter instrument offers a most valuable means for combating the destructive tendency of the disease. Sloughing and separation of the cauterized mass may be hastened by warm antiseptic poultices. Subcutaneous injections of 5 per cent. carbolic solution have been given, with apparent benefit, in a number of cases, but should only be relied upon in the treatment of the milder manifestations.
Benefit will accrue from the use of the ichthyol-mercurial ointment whose formula was given under treatment of Erysipelas. It has been suggested to treat these cases by the employment of the bacillus pyocyaneus, since it is known that this organism when injected with the anthrax bacillus materially attenuates its effect.
—Prophylaxis is most important. The bodies of all infected animals should be burned, not buried, since the resistant bacilli are often brought to the surface of the soil by earth-worms. Every discoverable source or medium of infection should be destroyed or sterilized.
This disease has been recognized for some time, mainly by French and Continental clinicians, and under such names as gangrène foudroyante, gangrène gazeuse, gangrenous septicemia, and gangrenous emphysema. The name malignant edema was given by Koch, who identified the infecting organism. It is one of the most dangerous forms of gangrenous inflammation, and occurs sometimes after serious injuries, and, again, after most trifling lesions, such as those inflicted by the dirty pointed implements of the gardener, etc., or even the stings of insects. Two cases are on record where the disease followed a puncture of the hypodermic needle for the administration of morphine. In one of these the organism was found in the solution; in the other it probably had been deposited upon the skin.
Malignant edema is essentially a specific form of gangrene (see Chapter V), and is mentioned here rather because of its specific character. It is characterized by rapidity of spread and the specific nature of the exudate, as well as by the speedy destruction of the tissue involved, and by more or less gas formation. It is not the same as the gaseous phlegmons described by some German surgeons, yet partakes of their general character. Gas phlegmons have been rarely noted, their peculiarity being formation not only of pus, but of more or less offensive gases, which escape when the phlegmon is incised. The gases are mainly due to the presence of bacillus aërogenes capsulatus, and gas phlegmons, as such, are to be regarded as instances of mixed or rarely pure infection.
Malignant edema is known by the brownish discoloration of the overlying skin, which is streaked with blue where the overfilled veins show through it, while the underlying tissues are sodden with fluid and more or less inflated by the gaseous products of decomposition, so that the finger detects a firm crepitus, as is common in subcutaneous emphysema. From the wound, if there is one, flows a thin, foul-smelling secretion, which may also be expressed from the deeper layers. That the neighboring lymph spaces and nodes are actively involved is evident from the enormous swelling of the latter, as well as from the general condition of the patient. The rapid elevation of temperature with but trifling remissions remains constant until shortly before death. The tongue early becomes dry and cleaves to the palate, its surface being covered with a thick, foul fur. Patients early become apathetic, complaining only of pain and burning thirst. Delirium and coma usually precede death, which may occur in fifteen to thirty hours. After death the cadaver bloats quickly and putrefaction goes on with amazing rapidity.
—At the seat of the lesion even muscles and tendons will be found macerated, bone denuded and surrounded by a putrid fluid, the entire region presenting a notable swelling and infiltration of soft parts with reddish fluids and stinking gases. The overlying skin will be stretched, and superficial blisters may deepen the intensity of the process. The veins are clogged with decomposed blood and broken-down thrombi, and in the heart and large vessels will be found putrid liquid as well as gas, to whose presence early and sudden death is probably due.
—This is unsatisfactory, especially when the bacillus of malignant edema is alone at fault. Patients may escape with their lives, but always at the expense of more or less tissue destruction.
—This should consist of extensive incision to permit escape of fluids and gases and relieve tension; of such antiseptic applications as can be made available; of immersion of the affected part in a hot antiseptic bath; and of such vigorous stimulation by the most powerful measures—strychnine, alcohol, etc.—in order to support the patient through the period of profound depression characteristic of the disease.
PLATE V
Actinomycosis. Ray Fungus in Man. (Gaylord.)
This also is a subacute but always destructive infection by a specific microörganism, though not a bacterium. Known always as actinomycosis in man, the disease, which is most common in cattle, is called lumpy jaw or swelled head, and years ago was usually regarded as cancer or as a malignant affection.
Many museum specimens labelled as cancer of the tongue, jaw, etc., have been shown to be instances of actinomycosis of these parts. It is occasionally met with in man, so that there are at least four hundred cases on record in this country and in Europe. The organism was recognized a half-century ago by Langenbeck and Lebert, but was not scientifically described until many years later. The names of Bollinger, Israel, and Ponfick will always be connected with these researches.
The organism belongs among the ray fungi, is known as the actinomycis, and occupies an uncertain place in classification. It is large enough, when entire, to be perceived by the naked eye, has ordinarily a yellowish tint, a tallowy consistence, and may be seen under the microscope to consist of a cluster of branching prolongations, club-shaped at the end, radiating from a common centre. They give it a sunflower appearance. It is stained with difficulty, the best stain being a combination of picrocarmine and an aniline dye. In tissue sections the Gram stain is the best. It is cultivated with difficulty, but can be grown upon solid media and may be inoculated. (See Plate V.)
As met with in tissue or in pus these fungi constitute small granulations, giving usually a gritty sensation to the finger, which is due to the presence of calcium salts. The recognition of this calcareous material is of importance, since it may enable a diagnosis to be made offhand, in a case which otherwise might puzzle one.
The disease is very common among cattle in certain regions, and causes the condemnation of many animals in every large stockyard establishment where inspection is careful and scientific. It occurs oftener in young than in old animals, and most frequently in those which come from valley regions and marshes. In animals infection occurs almost invariably through the mouth, which is easily explained by the fact that, in grazing, the lips, tongue, and gums are likely to be irritated and infected at any time from soil containing these fungi along with growing grain. The path of infection is usually by the mouth, while accident seems to determine whether the infection shall manifest itself mainly in the intestinal canal or the respiratory tract. In animals there is less tendency to suppuration than in man, the infection in man being usually a mixed one. The name lumpy jaw, so generally given to the affection, is indicative of the most conspicuous lesion in cattle, for the organism, having once invaded the gum, for instance, passes quickly to the bone, or, having involved the tongue, is not slow to infect the lymphatics of that region. In consequence we have tumors, often of inordinate size, which may involve the bones or the soft parts and cause great disfigurement, along with necrosis, leading eventually to the death of the animal. These tumors are essentially granulation tumors due to the presence of a specific irritant—the actinomycis—which acts here as do the tubercle bacillus, the lepra bacillus, etc., in other infectious granulomata.
In man the disease is generally accompanied by abscess formation, the pus containing the distinctive yellow gritty particles which are found in no other disease. The strong resemblance between the lymphoid cells of this form of granuloma and the embryonal cells of sarcoma has permitted the perpetuation of confusion between these two neoplasms.
Fig. 19
Actinomycosis in man. (Lexer.)
Large abscesses form as the result of the coalescence of small ones, and by the time the disease is recognized extensive destruction and loss of substance may have taken place. In man it is not alone about the mouth that the disease is noted, although primary lesion here is by no means infrequent. It leads to affections similar to that already spoken of in cattle, with a progressive infiltration and breaking down, including actual necrosis of bone, etc. The pus will escape at various points, and may give to the surface an appearance as of many craters with a central cause. When the disease has involved the lung, either directly or indirectly, the fungi and the calcareous particles may be found in the sputum. Should there be suspicion of this involvement, the sputum should always be examined. Even in the heart substance tumors of this same character have been found. The first case noted in man had undergone extensive vertebral caries. Intestinal infection is possible, in which case multiple lesions will form in the intestinal walls, which may contract adhesions to the abdominal parietes and discharge externally through them. The appendix has been found involved in such lesions. Infection of the skin has also been described, though this occurs more rarely.
—Actinomycotic lesions have been mistaken for cancer, sarcoma, tuberculosis, syphilis, etc. In man it will always be characterized by more or less suppuration, and in the purulent discharge from the infected focus the yellow calcareous particles should enable recognition of this disease at once.
—As long as the focus is accessible it is a purely local matter, and prognosis is as favorable as in local tuberculosis; but, inasmuch as in many cases infection has proceeded to a point where the surgeon cannot safely follow it, prognosis must be guarded. Actinomycosis is free from acute manifestations, for the main part free from pain, pursues a chronic course, and is characterized, as are the other slow infections, by progressive emaciation, prostration, etc. As it is essentially a chronic condition, time is afforded for careful study in doubtful cases, for microscopic examination, etc.
—This must consist of extirpation of all infected tissues and areas. If this can be done thoroughly there is a prospect of positive cure. Free incision, wide dissection, the use of the actual cautery, etc., are always called for in these cases. If it involves the tongue alone, there is an excellent prospect; if but a portion of the jaw is involved, a complete excision of one-half or more may be followed by excellent results. If, however, the lung, liver, vertebrae, or other vital and inaccessible parts are involved, surgical measures may afford amelioration, but can hardly be expected to cure.
Iodine, alone or in combination, has been found efficacious in the therapy of actinomycosis. In diluted solutions used locally, or as potassium iodide given internally or injected into tumors, it doubtless has a beneficial effect during the period of its administration. Recent reports and experiences show that great value attaches to the use, as suggested by Bevan, of copper sulphate in the treatment of actinomycosis, its use having been suggested by the fact that copper is used to destroy rusts (fungi) on grain. One-half grain (3 Cg.) may be given internally three times a day, while the sinuses are irrigated with a 1 per cent. solution. I have seen apparently complete cure of an aggravated case follow its use. Incidentally it may be stated that Bevan advises its use also in cases of blastomycosis.
While madura foot is not a disease from which domestic animals suffer, its general characteristics make it a proper subject for brief consideration. It is essentially a disease of the tropics and subtropics, and is often seen in some of our new possessions.
It commences as a painless swelling upon either aspect of the foot, in which hard nodules form, which later soften, ulcerate, and discharge puruloid material containing granules in which the microscope reveals mycelia of the peculiar fungus that produces the disease. In some cases these particles are black, in others colorless. The disease is of slow progress, and the lower limbs become weak, atrophied, and finally useless Death results from exhaustion or some terminal infection.
The principal lesion is the slowly growing gumma or granuloma, whose presence is unmistakable. This is due to the presence of a fungus, called by Vincent the streptothrix maduræ. Thus in its pathology the disease much resembles actinomycosis. The habitually bare feet of most of the inhabitants of the tropics and the habitat of the fungus explain the site of the primary lesion.
—The only treatment is extirpation of the growth—i. e., amputation.
PLATE VI
Tuberculosis of Testicle.
Miliary Tubercle with Caseation and Giant Cells. (Gaylord and Aschoff.)
a, seminal tubules; b, giant cells; c, caseated tubercles.