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Disturbances ofthe Heart
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Title: DISTURBANCESOFTHE HEART
Author: OLIVER T. OSBORNE, A.M., M.D.
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DISTURBANCES OFTHE HEART
Discussion ofthe Treatment oftheHeart in Its Various Disorders, With a Chapter on Blood Pressure
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OLIVER T. OSBORNE, A.M., M.D. Professor of Therapeutics and formerly Professor of Clinical Medicine
in Yale Medical School NEW HAVEN, CONN.
THE JOURNAL of AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Five Hundred Thirty-Five North Dearborn
Street, Chicago
PREFACE
The second edition of this book is offered with the hope that it will be as favorably received as was the former
edition, The text has been carefully revised, in a few parts deleted, and extensively elaborated to bring the
book up to the present knowledge concerning the scientific therapy ofheart disturbances. A complete section
has been added on blood pressure.
PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION
That marvelous organ which, moment by moment and year by year, keeps consistently sending the blood on
its path through the arteriovenous system is naturally one whose structure and function need to be carefully
studied if one is to guard it when threatened by disease. This series of articles deals with heart therapy, not
discussing theheart structurally and anatomically, but taking up in detail the various forms ofthe disturbances
which may affect the heart. The cordial reception given by the readers ofThe Journal to this series of articles
has warranted its issue in book form so that it may be slipped into the pocket for review at appropriate times,
or kept on the desk for convenient reference.
CONTENTS
Preface Preface to First Edition DisturbancesoftheHeart in General Classification of Cardiac Disturbances
Blood Pressure Hypertension Hypotension Pericarditis Myocardial Disturbances Endocarditis Chronic
Diseases ofthe Valves Acute Cardiac Symptoms: Acute Heart Attack Diet and Baths in Heart Disease Heart
Disease in Children and During Pregnancy Degenerations Cardiovascular Renal Disease Disturbancesof the
Heart Rate Toxic Disturbances and Heart Rate Miscellaneous Disturbances
DISTURBANCES OFTHEHEART IN GENERAL
Of prime importance in the treatment of diseases oftheheart is a determination ofthe exact, or at least
approximately exact, condition of its structures and a determination of its ability to work.
This is not the place to describe its anatomy or its nervous mechanism or the newer instruments of precision in
estimating theheart function, but they may be briefly itemized. It has now been known for some time that the
primary stimulus of cardiac contraction generally occurs at the upper part ofthe right auricle, near its junction
with the superior vena cava, and that this region may be the "timer" ofthe heart.
This is called the sinus node, or the sino-auricular node, and consists of a small bundle of fibers resembling
muscle tissue. Lewis [Footnote: Lewis: Lecture in the Harvey Society, New York Academy of Medicine, Oct.
31, 1914.] describes this bundle as from 2 to 3 cm. in length, its upper end being continuous with the muscle
fibers ofthe wall ofthe superior vena cava. Its lower end is continuous with the muscle fibers ofthe right
auricle. From this node "the excitation wave is conducted radially along the muscular strands at a uniform rate
of about a thousand millimeters per second to all portions ofthe auricular musculature."
Though a wonderfully tireless mechanism, this region may fall out of adjustment, and the stimuli proceeding
from it may not be normal or act normally. It has been shown recently not only that there must be perfection
of muscle, nerve and heart circulation but also that the various elements in solution in the blood must be in
perfect amounts and relationship to each other for theheart stimulation to be normal. It has also been shown
The Legal Small Print 7
that if for any reason this region ofthe right auricle is disturbed, a stimulus or impulse might come from some
other part ofthe auricle, or even from the ventricle, or from some point between them. Such stimulations may
constitute auricular, ventricular or auriculoventricular extra contractions or extrasystoles, as they are termed.
In the last few years it has been discovered that the auriculoventricular handle, or "bundle of His," has a
necessary function of conductivity of auricular impulse to ventricular contraction. A temporary disturbance of
this conductivity will cause a heart block, an intermittent disturbance will cause intermittent heart block
(Stokes-Adams disease), and a prolonged disturbance, death. It has also been shown that extrasystoles,
meaning irregular heart action, may be caused by impulses originating at the apex, at the base or at some point
in the right ventricle.
In the ventricles, Lewis states, the Purkinje fibers act as the conducting agent, stimuli being conducted to all
portions ofthe endocardium simultaneously at a rate of from 2,000 to 1,000 mm. per second. The ventricular
muscle also aids in the conduction ofthe stimuli, but at a slower rate, 300 mm. per minute. The rate of
conduction, Lewis believes, depends on the glycogen content ofthe structures, the Purkinje fibers, where
conduction is most rapid, containing the largest amount of glycogen, the auricular musculature containing the
next largest amount of glycogen, and the ventricular muscle fibers the least amount of glycogen.
Anatomists and histologists have more perfectly demonstrated the muscle fibers oftheheart and the structure
at and around the valves; the physiologic chemists have shown more clearly the action of drugs, metals and
organic solutions on the heart; and the physiologists and clinicians with laboratory facilities have
demonstrated by various new apparatus the action oftheheart and the circulatory power under various
conditions. It is not now sufficient to state that theheart is acting irregularly, or that the pulse is irregular; the
endeavor should be to determine whit causes the irregularity, and what kind of irregularity is present.
CLINICAL INTERPRETATION OF PULSE TRACINGS
A moment may be spent on clinical interpretation of pulse tracings. It has recently been shown that the
permanently irregular pulse is due to fibrillary contraction, or really auricular fibrillation in other words,
irregular stimuli proceeding from the auricle and that such an irregular pulse is not due to disturbance at the
auriculoventricular node, as believed a short time ago. These little irregular stimuli proceeding from the
auricle reach the auriculoventricular node and are transmitted to the ventricle as rapidly as the ventricle is able
to react. Such rapid stimuli may soon cause death; or, if for any reason, medicinal or otherwise, the ventricle
becomes indifferent to these stimuli, it may not take note of more than a certain portion ofthe stimuli. It then
acts slowly enough to allow prolongation of life, and even considerable activity. If such a heart becomes more
rapid from such stimuli, 110 or more, for any length of time, the condition becomes very serious. Digitalis in
such a condition is, of course, of supreme value on account of its ability to slow the heart. Such irregularity
perhaps most frequently occurs with valvular disease, especially mitral stenosis and in the muscular
degenerations of senility, as fibrosis.
Atropin has been used to differentiate functional heart block from that produced by a lesion. Hart [Footnote:
Hart: Am. Jour. Med. Sc., 1915, cxlix, 62.] has used atropin in three different types ofheart block. In the first
the heart block is induced by digitalis. This was entirely removed by atropin. In the second type, where there
was normal auricular activity, but where the ventricular contractions were decreased, atropin affected an
increase in the number of ventricular contractions, but did not completely remove theheart block. He adopted
atropin where theheart block was associated with auricular fibrillation. The number of ventricular
contractions was increased, but not enough to indicate the complete removal oftheheart block.
Lewis [Footnote: Lewis: Brit. Med. Jour., 1909, ii, 1528.] believes that 50 percent of cardiac arrhythmia
originates in muscle disturbance or incoordination in the auricle. These stimuli are irregular in intensity, and
the contractions caused are irregular in degree. If the wave lengths ofthe pulse tracing show no regularity- -if,
in fact, hardly two adjacent wave lengths are alike the disturbance is auricular fibrillation. Injury to the
auricle, or pressure for any reason on the auricle, may so disturb the transmission of stimuli and contractions
The Legal Small Print 8
that the contractions ofthe ventricle are very much fewer than the stimuli proceeding from the auricle. In
other words, a form ofheart block may occur. Various stimuli coming through the pneumogastric nerves,
either from above or from the peripheral endings in the stomach or intestines, may inhibit or slow the
ventricular contractions. It seems to have been again shown, as was earlier understood, that there are
inhibitory and accelerator ganglia in theheart itself, each subject to various kinds of stimulation and various
kinds of depression.
Both auricular fibrillation and auricular flutter are best shown by the polygraph and the electrocardiograph.
The former is more exact as to details. Auricular flutter, which has also been called auricular tachysystole, is
more common that is supposed. It consists of rapid coordinate auricular contractions, varying from 200 to 300
per minute. Fulton [Footnote: Fulton, F. T.: "Auricular Flutter," with a Report of Two Cases, Arch. Int. Med.,
October, 1913, p. 475.] finds in this condition that the initial stimulus arises in some part ofthe auricular
musculature other than the sinus node. It is different from paroxysmal tachycardia, in which theheart rate
rarely exceeds 180 per minute. In auricular flutter there is always present a certain amount ofheart block, not
all the stimuli reaching the ventricle. There may be a ratio of auricular contractions to ventricular contractions,
according to Fulton, of 2:1, 3:1, 4:1 and 5:1, the 2:1 ratio being most common.
Of course it is generally understood that children have a higher pulse rate than adults; that women normally
have a higher pulse rate than men at the same age; that strenuous muscular exercise, frequently repeated,
without cardiac tire while causing the pulse to be rapid at the time, slows the pulse during the interim of such
exercise and may gradually cause a more or less permanent slow pulse. It should be remembered that athletes
have slow pulse, and the severity of their condition must not be interpreted by the rate ofthe pulse. Even with
high fever the pulse of an athlete may be slow.
Not enough investigations have been made ofthe rate ofthe pulse during sleep under various conditions.
Klewitz [Footnote: Klewitz: Deutsch. Arch. f. klin. Med. 1913, cxii, 38.] found that the average pulse rate of
normal individuals while awake and active was 74 per minute, but while asleep the average fell to 59 per
minute. He found also that if a state of perfect rest could be obtained during the waking period, the pulse rate
was slowed. This is also true in cases of compensated cardiac lesions, but it was not true in decompensated
hearts. He found that irregularities such as extrasystoles and organic tachycardia did not disappear during
sleep, whereas functional tachycardia did.
It is well known that high blood pressure slows the pulse rate; that low blood pressure generally increases the
pulse rate, and that arteriosclerosis, or the gradual aging ofthe arteries, slows the pulse, except when the
cardiac degeneration of old age makes theheart again more irritable and more rapid. The rapid heart in
hyperthyroidism is also well understood. It is not so frequently noted that hypersecretion ofthe thyroid may
cause a rapid heart without any other tangible or discoverable thyroid symptom or symptoms of
hyperthyroidism. Bile in the blood almost always slows the pulse.
INTERPRETATION OF TRACINGS
The interpretation ofthe arterial tracing shows that the nearly vertical tip-stroke is due to the sudden rise of
blood pressure caused by the contraction ofthe ventricles. The long and irregular down-stroke means a
gradual fall ofthe blood pressure. The first upward rise in this gradual decline is due to the secondary
contraction and expansion ofthe artery; in other words, a tidal wave. The second upward rise in the decline is
called the recoil, or the dicrotic wave, and is due to the sudden closure ofthe aortic valves and the recoil of the
blood wave. The interpretation ofthe jugular tracing, or phlebogram as the vein tracing may be termed, shows
the apex ofthe rise to be due to the contraction ofthe auricle. The short downward curve from the apex means
relaxation ofthe auricle. The second lesser rise, called the carotid wave, is believed to be due to the impact of
the sudden expansion ofthe carotid artery. The drop ofthe wave tracing after this cartoid rise is due to the
auricular diastole. The immediate following second rise not so high as that ofthe auricular contraction is
known as the ventricular wave, and corresponds to the dicrotic wave in the radial. The next lesser decline
The Legal Small Print 9
shows ventricular diastole, or theheart rest. A tracing ofthe jugular vein shows the activity ofthe right side of
the heart. The tracing ofthe carotid and radial shows the activity ofthe left side ofthe heart. After normal
tracings have been carefully taken and studied by the clinician or a laboratory assistant, abnormalities in these
readings are readily shown graphically. Especially characteristic are tracings of auricular fibrillation and those
of heart block.
TESTS OFHEART STRENGTH
If both systolic and diastolic blood pressure are taken, and theheart strength is more or less accurately
determined, mistakes in the administration of cardiac drugs will be less frequent. Besides mapping out the size
of theheart by roentgenoscopy and studying the contractions oftheheart with the fluoroscope, and a detailed
study of sphygmographic and cardiographic tracings, which methods are not available to the large majority of
physicians, there are various methods of approximately, at least, determining the strength oftheheart muscle.
Barringer [Footnote: Barringer, T. B., Jr.: The Circulatory Reaction to Graduated Work as a Test of the
Heart's Functional Capacity, Arch. Int. Med., March, 1916, p. 363.] has experimented both with normal
persons and with patients who were suffering some cardiac insufficiency. He used both the bicycle ergometer
and dumb-bells, and finds that there is a rise of systolic pressure after ordinary work, but a delayed rise after
very heavy work, in normal persons. In patients with cardiac insufficiency he finds there is a delayed rise in
the systolic pressure after even slight exercise, and those with marked cardiac insufficiency have even a
lowering of blood pressure from the ordinary level. They all have increase in pulse rate. He quotes several
authorities as showing that during muscle work the carbon dioxid ofthe blood is increased in amount, which,
stimulating the nervous centers controlling the suprarenal glands, increases the epinephrin content of the
blood. The consequence is contraction ofthe splanchnic blood vessels, with a rise in general blood pressure.
Also, the quickened action oftheheart increases the blood pressure. After a rest from the exercise, the extra
amount of carbon dioxid is eliminated from the blood, the suprarenal glands decrease their activity, and the
blood pressure falls.
Nicolai and Zuntz [Footnote: Nicolai anal Zuntz: Berl. klin. Wehnschr., May 4, 1914, p. 821.] have shown
that with the first strain of heavy work theheart increases in size, but it soon becomes normal, or even
smaller, as it more strenuously contracts, and the cavities oftheheart will be completely emptied at each
systole. If the work is too heavy, and the systolic blood pressure is rapidly increased, it may become so great
as to prevent the left ventricle from completely evacuating its content. Theheart then increases in size and
may sooner or later become strained; if this strain is severe, an acute dilatation may of course occur, even in
an otherwise well person. Such instances are not infrequent. A heart which is already enlarged or slightly
dilated and insufficient, under the stress of muscular labor will more slowly increase its forcefulness, and we
have the delayed rise in systolic pressure.
Barringer concludes that:
The pulse rate and the blood pressure reaction to graduated work is a valid test ofthe heart's functional
capacity. If the systolic pressure reaches its greatest height not immediately after work, but from thirty to 120
seconds later, or if the pressure immediately after work is lower than the original level, that work, whatever its
amount, has overtaxed the heart's functional capacity and may be taken as an accurate measure ofthe heart's
sufficiency.
In another article, Barringer [Footnote: Barringer, T. B., Jr.: Studies ofthe Heart's Functional Capacity as
Estimated by the Circulatory Reaction to Graduated Work, Arch. Int. Med., May, 1916, p. 670.] advises the
use of a 5-pound dumb-bell extended upward from the shoulder for 2 feet. Each such extension represents 10
foot- pounds of work, although the exertion of holding the dumb-bell during the nonextension period is not
estimated. He believes that if circulatory tire is shown with less than 100 foot-pounds per minute exercise,
other signs of cardiac insufficiency will be in evidence. He also believes that these foot-pound tests can be
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[...]... inflammations The probability of chronic inflammation and weakening oftheheart muscle from such slow-going and continuous infection must be recognized, and the source of such infection removed The determination ofthe presence of valvular lesions is only a small part ofthe physical examination oftheheart Furthermore, theheart is too readily eliminated from the cause ofthe general disturbance because... back ofthe hand when the hand is raised should disappear, and they should practically collapse, in normal conditions, when the hand is at the level ofthe apex of theheart When the venous pressure is increased, this collapse will not occur until the hand is above the level of theheart Oliver [Footnote: Oliver: Quart Med Jour., 1907, i, 59.] found that the venous pressure denoted by the collapse of the. .. most of these high tension cases, the patients have rather a slow heart, provided theheart is sufficient Eyster and Hooker [Footnote: Eyster and Hooker: Am Jour Physiol., May, 1908.] found that the slowing of theheart in high blood pressure is due to action through the vagus nerves either from the inhibitory center in the medulla or reflexly by stimulation ofthe peripheral nerves ofthe vessels Another... Moreover, the contraction ofthe right heart may cause a wave in the veins ofthe extremities, and he believes that incompetency ofthe tricuspid valve may be the cause of varicosities in the veins ofthe extremities NORMAL BLOOD PRESSURE FOR ADULTS Woley [Footnote: Woley, II P.: The Normal Variation ofthe Systolic Blood Pressure, THE JOURNAL A M A., July 9, 1910, p 121.] after studying, the blood... ofthe effect on theheart and blood pressure The blood pressure is lowered by such catharsis, and theheart is often slowed Neilson and Hyland [Footnote: Neilson, C H., and Hyland, R F.: The Effect of Strong Purging on Blood Pressure and the Heart, THE JOURNAL A M A., Feb 8, 1913, p 436.] studied the effect of purging on theheart and blood pressure, and were inclined to the view that in serious heart. .. same time He then causes the person to bend rapidly at the knees twenty times The pulse rate and the blood pressure are then taken each minute for from three to five minutes The person then reclines, and the pulse and pressure are again recorded, Martinet says that an examination of these records in the form of a chart gives a graphic demonstration of theheart strength If theheart is weak, there are... millimeters, which is of very little importance, when the diastolic pressure is below 95, it seems advisable to urge the reading ofthe diastolic pressure at the beginning ofthe fifth phase The incident ofthe first phase, or when sound begins, is caused by the sudden distention ofthe blood vessel below the point of compression by the armlet In other words, the armlet pressure has at this point been overcome... these charges in the blood vessels ofthe muscles, the general blood pressure becomes raised on exercise, theheart more rapid and the temperature somewhat elevated, and the breathing is increased This increased heart rate does not stop immediately on cessation ofthe exercise, but persists for a longer or shorter time The better trained the individual, the sooner the speed of theheart becomes normal... The vessels pulsate and throb; the skin is pale; the head aches; the tongue is coated; the breath is foul; vertigo is often distressing; and not infrequently the hands and feet feel distended and swollen A thorough house-cleaning ofthe gastro-intestinal canal causes the expulsion ofthe offending substances and the expulsion of gas, whereupon the blood pressure often resumes its normal level and the. .. believes that the murmurs ofthe second phase, which in all normal conditions are heard during the 20 mm drop below the point at which the systolic pressure had been read, is "due to whirlpool eddies produced at the point of constriction ofthe blood vessel by the cuff ofthe instrument." The third phase is when these murmurs cease and the sound resembles the first, lasting he thinks for only 5 mm The third . jugular vein shows the activity of the right side of
the heart. The tracing of the carotid and radial shows the activity of the left side of the heart. After. Renal Disease Disturbances of the
Heart Rate Toxic Disturbances and Heart Rate Miscellaneous Disturbances
DISTURBANCES OF THE HEART IN GENERAL
Of prime importance