Treatise on Poisons by Sir Robert Christison
11. The subject of _Spontaneous Perforation of the Stomach_ is an
1221 words | Chapter 58
important topic for the medical jurist, because both the symptoms before
death and the appearances in the dead body are occasionally very like
the effects of some of the most active irritant poisons. The following
is a statement of the most material facts hitherto ascertained on this
subject; but it must be premised that a good deal of obscurity still
hangs over some parts of it.
Spontaneous perforation of the stomach is of three kinds. One is the
last stage of some varieties of scirrhus. The indurated membrane
ulcerates, the ulcer penetrates first the villous, then the muscular,
and at last the outer or peritoneal coat, so that the contents of the
stomach escape into the belly. The symptoms of the perforation are a
sense of something giving way in the pit of the stomach, acute pain
gradually extending over the whole abdomen, great tenderness and
tension, excessive prostration, and death commonly within twenty-four
hours. The symptoms which precede the perforation in general clearly
indicate organic derangement of the stomach, namely, aggravated
dyspepsia of long standing. Several cases of this description may be
seen in a thesis by M. Laisné,[175] a pupil of Professor Chaussier. Two
characteristic cases have been published by Dr. Crampton;[176] and Mr.
Alfred Taylor has referred to several others, the stomachs of which are
preserved in Guy’s Hospital Museum, and gives the particulars of some
which had occurred in the practice of that institution or to his
friends.[177] Occasionally no symptom exists prior to the perforation,
as in an instance related by Dr. Kelly of a stout healthy servant, who
was suddenly seized with excruciating pain in the stomach and expired in
eighteen hours, and in whose body the stomach was found perforated in
the middle of an extensive thickening and induration of the villous
coat.[178]
The second variety of perforation takes place by simple ulceration
without previous scirrhus. In one of Dr. Crampton’s papers will be found
some remarks by Mr. Travers, along with a case of this kind. The subject
of it was a man of a strumous habit, who enjoyed good health, till one
day at dinner he was suddenly attacked with acute pain in the pit of the
stomach, and died in thirteen hours. The stomach was found perforated in
the centre of a superficial ulcer of the mucous coat, occupying
two-thirds of the ring of the pylorus.[179] This case shows that the
present variety of perforation may take place without the preliminary
organic disease being indicated by any symptom. The circumstances under
which it commenced are peculiarly important in relation to the medical
jurisprudence of poisoning. Another case which has been lately described
with great exactness by M. Duparcque, was preceded only by very trivial
dyspeptic symptoms. Here the whole mischief arose from a small ulcer
eight lines long and five in breadth on the inside of the stomach, and
not more than a line and a half in diameter at the perforation through
the peritonæum.[180] Several excellent examples of the same disease have
been related by Dr. Abercrombie.[181] In one of these the ulcer in the
centre of which the perforation had been formed, was not bigger than a
shilling, and the rest of the stomach quite healthy. A very instructive
case of a similar nature, but of unusual duration, has been related by
Mr. Alfred Taylor. A young woman, after suffering for some time from
nausea and constant craving for food, but inability to indulge it, and
occasionally from pain in the stomach, was attacked suddenly with the
usual symptoms of perforation, and died forty-two hours afterwards. The
villous coat of the stomach, though generally healthy, presented at the
lesser curvature several small elevated points, and in the middle of two
of these a sharply-defined ulcer, one affecting the mucous coat only,
while the other, which was half an inch in diameter where it affected
the mucous coat, perforated the muscular and peritonæal coats by a hole
no bigger than a crow-quill.[182] A case still more remarkable has been
also related by the same author, where the circumstances naturally gave
rise to a strong suspicion of poisoning. A young female in a noble
family, subject to slight dyspepsia, was suddenly attacked, three hours
after a meal, with violent vomiting and pain in the belly. Collapse soon
ensued, and in fifteen hours she died, under so strong suspicions of
poisoning that various antidotes were administered. This suspicion was
in some measure borne out by proofs of an intrigue having been carried
on between her and a male person in the house, and by the discovery
after death of the signs of recent sexual intercourse. On examining the
cavity of the abdomen, however, there was found, at the upper and back
part of the stomach near the pylorus, an oval perforation, half an inch
wide, surrounded by a firm, smooth, almost cartilaginous margin, without
any inflammation near it. Mr. Taylor properly points out, that the
sudden occurrence of such violent symptoms so long after a meal is
incompatible with the action of any poison which could cause perforation
in fifteen hours; and that the characters of the perforation were those
of a natural disease long latent. He could not detect a trace of any
poison in the stomach.[183]—In some cases, as in that of M. Duparcque,
the pain at the moment the perforation is completed is not at first
violent, because the close proximity of some adjoining organ, such as
the liver, prevents the contents of the stomach from escaping for a
time, so that inflammation of the peritonæum is but gradually developed.
The third variety of spontaneous perforation is of a much more singular
kind. It is produced not by ordinary ulceration, but by a jelly-like
softening of the coats. The gelatinization sometimes extends over a
great extent of surface, affecting chiefly the villous coat, so that the
aperture through the other membranes is surrounded by extensive
pulpiness of the internal membrane. It is seldom accompanied by
vascularity. Its symptoms are exceedingly obscure. In adults there is
very rarely any symptom at all till the perforation is complete;[184] in
children, as appears from a paper by Dr. J. Gairdner of this city, and
another by Dr. Pitschaft, a German author,[185] the early symptoms
indicate an obscure chronic gastritis. The nature of this singular
disease will be discussed in the section on the morbid appearances. At
present it may merely be observed, that the injury caused to the coats
of the stomach seems to be precisely the same with the gelatinization,
which is sometimes found after death in persons who had no symptoms of
an affection of the stomach, and which is ascribed by John Hunter,[186]
and most British pathologists, to the solvent action of the gastric
juice in the dead body. This disease is well described by Laisné in his
thesis formerly quoted. The following is a good example: a young lady,
previously in good health, was awakened at three one morning with
excruciating pain in the stomach, which nothing could alleviate. She
expired seven hours after; and on dissection two holes were found in the
back part of the stomach, surrounded with much softening of the villous
coat.[187] Another case will be mentioned in page 118.—The appearances
produced by this disease have been mistaken for the effects of corrosive
poisons.
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