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Neuralgia And The Diseases That Resemble It Part 17

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There are six situations in which gouty pains are apt to be developed in a way to lead to the false diagnosis of neuralgia: (1) In the eye; (2) more indefinitely within the cranium; (3) in the stomach, simulating gastralgia; (4) in the chest, simulating angina pectoris; (5) in the dorsum of the foot, simulating neuralgia of the anterior tibial nerve; (6) in a somewhat diffuse manner about the hip and back of thigh, simulating sciatica.

It is not really a common thing to find such cases very difficult of diagnosis, provided that the possibility of their occurrence has been carefully noted; for the gouty habit has a number of slight manifestations which are usually enough to discover it even when its more decided symptoms are entirely wanting.

Thus, in the first place, it will be almost invariably found, on inquiry, that the patient has always been intolerant of beer and of sweet wines. Also, he has been liable (either after a single large excess in eating or a prolonged course of a diet too highly animalized in proportion to the amount of exercise taken) to attacks of general malaise, with or without uneasiness, just short of decided pain, about the metacarpo-phalangeal joint of the great-toe, and ending after a few hours or days with a free discharge of uric acid. Less frequently, but still very often, it will be found that he has some deposit of lithate of soda (chalk-stone) in some situation where its presence does not necessarily arrest attention; Dr. Garrod has shown how often these little tophi are found in the cartilage of the ear. Careful examination will sometimes detect their presence in the sclerotic of the eye. But in doubtful cases it would be always well to make a cautious trial of colchic.u.m, which, if the case be gouty, will nearly always produce an amount of relief sufficient to confirm the diagnosis of gout. At least, this rule holds goods for the external forms; but in the case of the supposed gouty pseudo-angina it is far best to trust to opium, as colchic.u.m may prove too depressing to a heart which may quite possibly be already the subject of organic disease. My own impression is, that it was these cases of gouty heart-pain, which are not true angina at all, that procured for opium its high reputation for relieving the latter disease, a reputation which is by no means confirmed by my own experience, since I have found that drug enormously inferior to stimulants like ether in its power to relieve genuine angina.

Lastly, if there be no other possibility of making ourselves certain whether there is or is not a gouty taint at the bottom of the quasi-neuralgic pains, we may adopt Dr. Garrod's test of subjecting the serum of the blood to a search for uric acid (thread-test).

CHAPTER X.



COLIC, AND OTHER PAINS OF PERIPHERAL IRRITATION.

Colic, or painful half spasm, half paralysis of the large intestines, is the best example of a kind of spasmodic pains to which some authors accord the name of neuralgia, as it seems to me without good reason.

They appear to be quite independent of the operation of the neurotic temperament, and to be caused entirely by the operation of some local irritant, or narcotic irritant, upon the muscular fibres of the viscus.

In the case of colic this influence is most frequently and most powerfully exerted by lead, which undoubtedly becomes locally deposited in chronic poisoning with that metal; at other times it is produced by the irritation of indigestible food pa.s.sing along the alimentary ca.n.a.l.

That there may be such a thing as enteralgia, of really neuralgic character, I do not deny; on the contrary, so far as regards the r.e.c.t.u.m, I have myself seen such a case. But true neuralgia of the large bowel is exceedingly uncommon; what goes by the name is usually either colic from local irritation of the viscus; or a mere hysterical hyperaesthesia of the lining membrane, which is one of the occasional phenomena of spinal irritation; or else it is a case of neuralgia of the abdominal wall, such as is included in the description of "lumbo-abdominal neuralgia,"

in Part I. of this work.

There is no occasion to describe minutely the symptoms of so familiar a disease as lead-colic, or as colic from irritation by indigestible food, when they occur in their typical forms. In the former case the marked constipation which ushers in the attack of pain, and the peculiar greenish-yellow sallowness nearly always seen in the countenance, ought to be sufficient to direct examination to the gums (for the blue line) and inquiry as to any possible impregnation of the system with lead, owing either to the nature of the patient's occupation, or to some accidental entry of the poison into the drinking-water, or its inhalation from the walls of newly-painted rooms, etc. In the latter case, the fact that the attack of colic was shortly preceded by a meal, either of obviously indigestible food, or too copious in quant.i.ty and heterogeneous in kind, or too hastily eaten without sufficient mastication, supplies a clew.

But there are a few cases representing minor degrees of either of these kinds of colic, that are much less easy to diagnose distinctly.

Lead-poison sometimes enters the system continuously, for a long period, but in proportions too minute to produce the effects which we identify as an attack of lead-colic. I believe that for the production of the latter complaint it is necessary that the poisoning shall be sufficiently intense completely to paralyze a considerable piece of bowel, thus altogether hindering peristalsis, or, rather, making the peristaltic acts of the non-paralyzed portions above worse than fruitless. But there is a minor degree in which it may happen that the local affection (owing, I believe, to a less extensive deposit of lead in the bowel) does not reach the decidedly paralytic stage; the state then is one of irregular and painful spasm of individual fibres (quite possibly intermingled with paralysis of a few others), and the practical result is irregularity of evacuation--now diarrhoea, and again constipation--and the frequent recurrence of twinges of pain that are easily mistaken for abdominal neuralgia. Such symptoms as these are nearly always found to have occurred, if proper inquiry be made, in those examples of chronic lead-poisoning in which the toxic process goes on to the development of epilepsy, or marked symmetrical paralysis of the wrist-extensors, without the patient having ever suffered an attack of ordinary colic. In these slow and insidious cases the const.i.tutional affection may not have reached the height at which the complexion and general aspect of the patient suggests metallic poisoning: and the case may present very neuralgia-like features. The absence of the _points douloureux_ is not, as we have seen, conclusive against neuralgia in its early stages. It is therefore an excellent rule, in all cases of chronic recurrent spasmodic pain in the abdomen, especially in men, to investigate the possibilities of lead-poisoning; and, if the slightest suspicious appearance of the gums be found, this track of inquiry must be followed up exhaustively before we abandon the idea. The absence of all special neurotic history in a patient's family should increase our suspicions respecting pains of this character that continue with an obstinacy which makes it unlikely they are due to improper food.

Pains of abdominal irritation are, however, without doubt produced in some cases by unsuspected faults of diet, and may even recur in such a quasi-periodic manner as to strongly suggest the idea of neuralgia in the lumbo-abdominal nerve. One special variety of this happens, I believe, much more often than is thought. A patient will habitually take considerable quant.i.ties of some article of food which he does not readily digest, but which is not at all acutely irritant: under these circ.u.mstances a simple acc.u.mulation is apt to take place in the colon, especially at the top of the ascending colon, the top of the descending colon, or just above the sigmoid flexure, or else in the caec.u.m. The result of acc.u.mulation in the last of these places is not unfrequently typhlitis and perityphlitis, this part of the bowel having (for some reason) a special tendency to inflammation. Deposits in the other localities named are rarely the cause of inflammation, but they very frequently give rise to violent pain, which is exceedingly apt to be taken for the pain either of gall-stone, of renal calculus, or else of some abdominal neuralgia. In cases, therefore, where there is any possibility that acc.u.mulation is the cause of pain, it is highly desirable to commence with a dose of castor-oil and laudanum, followed up, if needful, by the administration of a large warm-water enema, given through an O'Beirne's tube. The most violent and recurrent attacks of pain in the renal region, the flank, the abdomen, or the groin, will sometimes be instantly cured by such means, sufficiently proving the non-neuralgic character of the complaint.

I have elsewhere explained that the impaction of a renal or an hepatic calculus, in the ureter or the ductus choledochus, may set up a true neuralgia in persons with the requisite congenital predisposition. The pa.s.sage of renal or hepatic calculi may give rise to symptoms falsely suggesting neuralgia, which require just to be mentioned here. But there is no need to dwell much upon the diagnosis, for the pa.s.sage of renal or hepatic calculi has always attendant symptoms and features of const.i.tutional history, which ought to preserve the physician from mistake. The sensation of constriction, of nausea and vomiting, the faintness approaching to collapse, the persistent and constantly increasing severity of the pain up to the moment at which mechanical relief occurs, to say nothing of other phenomena, are distinctive to the skilled observer, and, when taken in conjunction with the history of past attacks, if any, will always prevent mistakes. In the few cases which might still be doubtful it will be well to try the effect of a relaxing dose of chloroform, which, in the case of calculus, will often put an end to the paroxysm at once and finally.

CHAPTER XI.

DYSPEPTIC HEADACHE.

A final word or two must be given to the distinction between neuralgia of the head and an affection so utterly different that it is surprising that they should be so frequently confounded. One constantly hears medical men speak of "sick headache" (migraine) as if it were the same thing as headache from indigestion; and, unfortunately, they often treat migraine upon this confused and erroneous notion, doing no little mischief thereby.

But, although migraine, already amply described, is entirely independent of the state of digestion, and its stomach-phenomena are purely secondary to the affection of the fifth nerve, there is a kind of headache really dependent on imperfect digestion. The sufferers from these headaches are dyspeptics whose stomach troubles are the result of chronic gastric catarrhal inflammation. (In the acute form of gastric catarrh there are even more severe headaches; but the general symptoms of the disorder are too marked to allow us to mistake the case for neuralgia complicated with secondary stomach disturbance.) The patients in question have frequently pa.s.sed so gradually into the dyspeptic condition as to have become accustomed to it, and inclined to forget that the stomach was the organ which first gave them annoyance. The headaches, which occur from time to time, are either frontal or (more frequently) occipital in position, and they are usually quite evenly bilateral; still, there is not enough uniformity of difference between them and true migraine, in this respect, to enable us to establish a decided diagnosis upon it. This much may be said, however: that the pain is rarely or never seated in one parietal region, as is frequently the case with migraine and with clavus. The patient suffers very strikingly, in almost every case, from languor and a feeling of inability to exert himself; and has also much aching pain in the limbs, and usually a pain (sometimes very severe) in the scapular region. The tongue may vary a good deal in appearance, especially as regards the degree of general redness; but it always has enlarged papillae, most prominent toward the tip, and more or less thick furring at the back, and reaching forward, in some cases, nearly to the tip, to which the "strawberry" aspect is then confined. The headache is frequently joined with nausea, but never with absolute vomiting, unless the stomach has been provoked with a meal that gives it more trouble than usual. The desponding frame of mind which this kind of dyspeptics always exhibit distinguishes them, in most cases, quite sufficiently (together with the unwholesome complexion, the appearance of the tongue, and the great complaints of general malaise and aching and feebleness of the limbs) from the victims of migraine, who are often persons of bright spirits and lively intelligence in the intervals of their attacks; but, above all, there is nothing of the regular and characteristic sequence of events which distinguishes the attacks of migraine. The attacks are not periodic, but nearly always depend on some chance dietary indiscretion, or other imprudence, which has visibly aggravated the stomach irritation. And, when the pain does come on, it has no uniform tendency to go on intensifying for some hours and culminate in vomiting, followed by sleep, after which the patient is free. On the contrary, the digestive disturbance is the provocation, and the pain itself is of a heavy character, with a sense of tension or fulness, and it does not go on intensifying in a regular manner, up to a climax, but hangs about in a dull, tormenting way, and frequently is just as bad after sleep as it was before. The diagnosis of these headaches from neuralgic headache is not really difficult; it only requires the use of a fair amount of caution in observation. It would, however, be exceedingly advantageous that the word "sick-headache"

should be dropped altogether, and that migraine should always be called by that name (or "megrim," if you will), and that headaches really proceeding from chronic catarrhal disease of the stomach should be called "dyspeptic" headaches. The present state of nomenclature does much to perpetuate a confusion of ideas which ought not to exist any longer, and which leads to much practical mischief.

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