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Neuralgia And The Diseases That Resemble It Part 15

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It is notoriously the fact that hypochondriasis especially affects the rich and idle cla.s.ses; but it would be a great mistake to suppose that it never attacks the poor or the hard-worked: only, in the latter instances, it apparently needs, for it development, the existence of strong family tendencies to neurotic disease, and especially to insanity. Among the numerous debilitated persons who attend the out-patient rooms of our hospitals we every now and then encounter as typical a case of hypochondriasis as could be found even among the rich and gloomy old bachelors who haunt some of our London clubs. I have one such patient under my care now, who has been a repeated visitor at the Westminster Hospital during many years: he has had pseudo-neuralgic pains nearly everywhere at different times; but his most complaint has been of pain in the groin and s.c.r.o.t.u.m of the right side. The existence of what seemed, at first, like the tender points of lumbo-abdominal neuralgia, at one time led me to believe it was a case of that affection; but I was soon undeceived by finding that the tenderness did not remain constant to the same points, but s.h.i.+fted about. This man has professed, by turns, to derive benefit from nearly all the drugs in the Pharmacopoeia; but the only remedies that have done him good, for more than a day or two at a time, have been valerian and a.s.safoetida, with the prolonged use of cod-liver oil. He will never be really cured; and I suspect that the secret of his maladies is an inveterate habit of masturbation acting on a nervous system hereditarily predisposed to hypochondriasis.

Sometimes it happens that the starting-point of hypochondriac pains, simulating neuralgia, is a blow, or other bodily injury acting on a predisposed nervous system. Another of my patients at the Westminster Hospital was a policeman, who had received a severe kick in the groin; he suffered pains which at first seemed to wear all the characters of true neuralgia in the pudic nerve, but afterward s.h.i.+fted to other places and exhibited all the intractability of hypochondriasis; the patient also developed the regular appearance and the characteristic hallucinations of the latter disease. On the last occasion when I saw him, he struck me as likely to become really insane, in the melancholic form; and the probability is that the casualty which he suffered was only accidentally the starting-point of a malady which was inherent in him since birth, and would have been developed, in any case, at some period of his life.

CHAPTER IV.

THE PAINS OF LOCOMOTOR ATAXY.

Considering the vast amount that has been written about this disease during the last few years, it might be thought superfluous for me to give any description of its general features. But it unfortunately happens that there is still great divergence of opinion among authorities as to the true limitation of the group of cases that can properly be ranked under this t.i.tle, and, indeed, as to the propriety of employing the t.i.tle at all. The phrase ataxie locomotrice progressive, as every one knows, was applied by d.u.c.h.enne de Boulogne to a cla.s.s of cases which really only form a subdivision of the group known under the older t.i.tle of _tabes dorsalis_ and the most advanced German pathologists maintain that the old word was better, and that d.u.c.h.enne was altogether wrong in making the one symptom, ataxy of locomotion, the bases of a new phraseology;[49] more especially as his theory as to the seat of the morbid changes was undoubtedly erroneous.



In this country, however, there is as yet no disposition to give up the phrase locomotor ataxy, and it only remains to define with sufficient care the cla.s.s of cases to which the word is here meant to apply. The disease is understood to depend upon a degeneration of the spinal cord, of which the following description is given by Lockhart Clarke:[50] "In true locomotor ataxy, the spinal cord is invariably altered in structure. Its membranes, however, are sometimes apparently unaffected, or affected only in a slight degree; but generally they are much congested, and I have seen them thickened posteriorly by exudations, and adherent, not only to each other, but to the posterior surface of the cord. The posterior columns, including the posterior nerve-roots, are the parts of the cord which are chiefly altered in structure. This alteration is peculiar, and consists of atrophy and degeneration of the nerve fibres to a greater or less extent, with hypertrophy of the connective tissue, which give to the columns a grayish and more transparent aspect; in this tissue are embedded a mult.i.tude of corpora amylacea. Many of the blood vessels that travel the columns are loaded or surrounded to a variable depth by oil-globules of various sizes. For the production of ataxy, it seems to be necessary that the changes extend along a certain length, from one to two inches of the cord. The posterior nerve-roots, both within and without the cord, are frequently affected by the same kind of degeneration, which sometimes extends to the surface even of the lateral columns, and occasionally along the edges of the anterior. Not unfrequently the extremity of the posterior cornua, and even deeper parts of the gray substance, are more or less damaged by areas of disintegration. The morbid process appears to travel from centre to periphery, that is, from the spinal cord to the posterior roots. In the cerebral nerves, on the contrary, the morbid change seems to travel in the opposite direction, that is, from the periphery toward the centres. From the optic nerves it has been found to extend as far as the corpora geniculata, but seldom as far as the corpora quadrigemina.

With the exception of the fifth, seventh, and eighth pair, all the cerebral nerves have occasionally been found more or less altered in structure."

The symptoms which occur in cases in which the above are the morbid appearances found after death are (roughly speaking) as follows:[51] "A peculiar gait, arising from want of co-ordinating power in the lower extremities, a gait precipitate and staggering, the legs starting hither and thither in a very disorderly manner, and the heels coming down with a stamp at each step."

No true paralysis in the lower extremities or elsewhere. Characteristic neuralgic pains, erratic paroxysmal in the feet and legs chiefly--pains of a boring, throbbing, shooting character, like those caused by a sharp electric shock.

More or less numbness, in the feet and legs chiefly, in all forms of sensibility, excepting that by which differences of temperature are recognized.

Frequent impairment of sight or hearing, one or both.

Frequent transitory or permanent strabismus or ptosis, one or both.

No very obvious paralysis of the bladder or lower bowel.

No necessary impairment of s.e.xual power.

No tingling or kindred phenomenon.

No marked tremulous, convulsive, or spasmodic phenomena.

No marked impairment of muscular nutrition and irritability.

No impairment of the mental faculties.

Occasional injection of the conjunctivae, with contraction of the pupils.

The probable limitation of the distinctive phenomenon of locomotor ataxy (the want of co-ordinating motor power) to the lower extremities.

The above description includes all the necessary facts for the recognition of the disease, except one, namely, that the use of the eyesight is always needed in order to prevent the patient from falling during progression; and is usually necessary even to enable him to stand upright without falling.

The pains of locomotor ataxy are early phenomena in most cases, and they are usually present, more or less, throughout the course of the disease.

They are often preceded by strabismus, with or without ptosis; the strabismus, is usually accompanied by amblyopia. It may happen, however, that neuralgic pains are, for a considerable time, the only noticeable phenomena; or they may be attended with a certain amount of anaesthesia.

The most frequent type of the pains is lancinating or stabbing; they are like violent neuralgias occurring successively in various nerves; s.h.i.+fting about from one to another. Sometimes it will happen that the pain remains fixed to one particular nerve for hours together; but it never continues long without showing the characteristic tendency to move about. Most commonly our diagnosis is soon a.s.sisted by the occurrence of a greater or less degree of ataxy. But, even before the setting in of definite atactic symptoms, the s.h.i.+fting character of the pains, and the development of a very noticeable amount of anaesthesia, together with the absence of anything like positive motor paralysis, will have given us the necessary clew.

The effect of treatment, or rather its want of effect, usually affords powerful a.s.sistance in distinguis.h.i.+ng the pains of locomotor ataxy from those of true neuralgia. Even where the pain has been fixed for some hours in a single nerve, and has been stopped by some powerful remedy (such as hypodermic morphia), it will be apt speedily to recur, and frequently in some quite distant nerve.

Locomotor ataxy is a disease affecting chiefly the male s.e.x, and occurring in the immense majority of cases between the thirty-fifth and the fiftieth year.

Not merely is it strictly limited to individuals who belong to families with neurotic tendencies, but it is itself frequently seen to occur in several members of the same family, and sometimes of the same generation. When, therefore, we meet with neuralgic pains of the s.h.i.+fting type above described, it is very important at once to make careful inquiries whether any members of the family have suffered from symptoms of ataxy going on to a fatal result. Otherwise, we might be the more readily deceived into the idea that the pains were merely neuralgic, because the symptoms of the disease are not unfrequently provoked by such causes as fatigue and exposure to cold or wet, which are also very ordinary exciting causes of true neuralgia.

FOOTNOTES:

[49] The most complete and careful work of the German school, on this subject, is the "Lehre von der Tabes dorsualis," of E. Cyon. (Berlin, 1867.)

[50] _Lancet_, June 10, 1865. (Comment on a case of Dr. J. Hughlings Jackson's.)

[51] Radcliffe, in "Reynolds's System of Medicine," vol. ii.

CHAPTER V.

THE PAINS OF CEREBRAL ABSCESS.

Cerebral abscesses is, fortunately, a rare disease; but the very fact of its rarity makes the resemblance of the pain it causes to that of neuralgia the more likely to lead us into serious errors. We are apt to forget the possibility of suppuration of the brain on account of its infrequence.

Pain in the head is present as an early symptom of abscess in the brain in a large proportion of cases in which there is pain at all. [Of seventy-five cases of cerebral abscess a.n.a.lyzed by Gull and Sutton (Reynolds's "System of Medicine," vol. ii.), pain was a symptom in thirty-nine, and most frequently an early symptom.] Many cases are recorded in which it preceded every other morbid sign by a considerable period. It is usually more or less paroxysmal, often strikingly so; in the latter case, it bears a great similarity to neuralgia. On the other hand, it sometimes takes the shape of a fixed burning sensation, much less resembling neuralgia. The situation of the pain by no means always, nor even usually, corresponds to the situation of the cerebral abscess; on the contrary, abscess in the cerebellum has often caused pain referred to the anterior part of the head, and so on. So long as the disease remains characterized only by pain, more or less, of a paroxysmal character, the diagnosis must be very uncertain; but in the great majority of cases certain more distinctive symptoms soon become superadded; either convulsions (sometimes hemiplegic), vertigo, coma, paralysis, vomiting, or a combination of some of these.

In the stage in which there is as yet no conspicuous symptom but severe pain, the diagnosis of cerebral abscess from neuralgia must rest on the following points of contrast:

_Cerebral Abscess._ _Neuralgia of Head._

Often occurs secondarily to caries Rarely appears before p.u.b.erty.

of internal ear, and purulent discharge the result of scarlet fever, measles, etc., in childhood.

Frequently follows a blow or Comparatively seldom caused by injury. blow, or other external injury or caries of bone.

No true "points douloureux." If severe, soon presents, in most cases, the "points douloureux."

Usually the pain does not Intermissions of pain complete, completely intermit. and of considerable length.

Pain often excruciating from a Pain usually not very violent at very early period. first.

Pain often limited in situation, Pain superficial; follows seems deep-seated, though, as distribution of recognizable often as not, it has no relation nerve-branches belonging to to the site of the abscess. the trigeminus or the great occipital.

No well localized vaso-motor or Usually there are lachrymation, secretory complications. congestion of conjunctiva, or other vaso-motor and secretory complications, such as are described in Chapter III.

Very rare in old age; then Severe and intractable neuralgia usually traumatic. is commonest in the degenerative period of life.

Relief from stimulant narcotics Relief from opium, etc., is much very transitory. more considerable and permanent.

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Neuralgia And The Diseases That Resemble It Part 15 summary

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