Jungheinrich Forklift Efg 430 G 500dz Spare Parts Manual Fn426994

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 22

Jungheinrich Forklift EFG 430

G-500DZ Spare Parts Manual


FN426994
To download the complete and correct content, please visit:

https://manualpost.com/download/jungheinrich-forklift-efg-430-g-500dz-spare-part
s-manual-fn426994

DescriptionJungheinrich Forklift EFG 430 G-500DZ Spare Parts Manual


FN426994Size: 4.38 MBFormat: PDFLanguage: EnglishBrand: JungheinrichType
of Machine: ForkliftType of document: Parts CatalogModel: Jungheinrich EFG 430
G-500DZ Forklift Spare Parts CatalogDate: 2011Number of Pages: 263
PagesSerial Number: FN426994
Download all on: manualpost.com.
[Unrelated content]
Another random document on
Internet:
Fig. 55.—Beginning of operative shock.
Chart showing the method of recording
blood pressure during operation. Note that
the pulse and respiration show no
remarkable changes, but the blood
pressure steadily fell, the systolic more
than the diastolic so that the pulse
pressure was gradually reaching the
danger point. Further work on this case
was stopped following the warning given
by the blood pressure. The patient was
returned to the ward and a week later
anesthesia was again given, the operation
was completed, and the patient had a
satisfactory convalescence.
A method which is widely used is as follows: The anesthetist wraps the cuff of
one of the dial instruments around the patient's arm, and arranges the dial so
that it can easily be seen by him at all times. This does not in any way interfere
with the work of the surgeon. Over the brachial artery below the cuff is the bell of
a binaural stethoscope held in place by the strap attachment now on the market.
The tubes of the stethoscope are long enough to reach conveniently to the ear
pieces. A watch is pinned to the sheet of the table. He has a chart, as illustrated
(Fig. 56) on a board and makes a dot in every space for five minute intervals. By
joining the lines a curve is obtained which tells at a glance what the circulation is
doing. I feel sure that more attention and care exercised on the part of the
anesthetist would be the means of conserving many lives lost from shock
following operation.

Fig. 56.—Showing method of using blood


pressure instrument during operation without
interfering with the operator or assistants. Sheet
thrown back to show cuff on arm of patient.
Anesthetist has chart on table beside him, dial
pinned to pad in full view, bulb near hand. Extra
tubing must be put on the blood pressure
instrument.
A sudden drop in the pressure picture may mean a large hemorrhage. The
gradual return of the pressure picture means that the vasomotor mechanism has
acted to keep up the pulse pressure. Should the diastolic pressure continually fall,
it may mean that the hemorrhage is still taking place (Wiggers).
Blood Pressure in Obstetrics

One might affirm almost without fear of contradiction that the constant
determination of blood pressure during pregnancy is more important than the
examination of the urine. Within recent years a number of observers having
access to a large material, have given the results of their findings. There is a
striking unanimity of opinion, although now and then a difference in minor
details.
The blood pressure should be taken frequently during pregnancy. The usual and
highly essential precautions in taking pressure in general apply most particularly
in these cases. Towards the end of pregnancy the pressure should if possible be
taken daily and oftener if necessary.
Pressure in women is usually below 120 mm. Many patients have a temporary
rise in blood pressure during pregnancy, due oftenest to constipation, without
developing other symptoms. This is common to all conditions and has no
significance. Some think that an abnormally low pressure, that is, a systolic below
90 mm., suggests that the patient is likely to react unduly to the strain of labor.
This is denied by others. Among 1000 cases (Irving) the pressure was below 90
in only one case. A gradually rising pressure precedes albuminuria, as a rule. If
there is albumin without change in pressure the albumin may usually be
disregarded. Some think that a pressure over 130 mm. systolic should be
carefully watched. The danger limit is set by some at 150 mm. If the blood
pressure from the very first is high, it may mean only that that was the patient's
normal pressure. This calls for increased watchfulness. It is held by some that
high blood pressure favors hemorrhage and probably explains the hemorrhagic
lesions in the placenta and some viscera in eclampsia and albuminuria.
All are agreed that the most significant change is the gradual but sure rise from a
low pressure. When this is combined with albuminuria the danger of toxemia is
imminent. The high blood pressure in those under thirty years of age seems to be
a more certain sign of approaching toxemia than the same pressure in those
older. The pressure falls within a few days to its normal after delivery in the toxic
cases.
Although the emesis gravidarum is held to be a sign of a toxemia of some
unknown nature, the blood pressure is never raised even in the pernicious form.

Infectious Diseases

In all infectious diseases the blood pressure tends to be lower than normal.
During chills the systolic may rise to great height due to the violent muscular
contractions.
We found the blood pressure of great value in giving information concerning the
circulation. Again we repeat that it is not the systolic alone or the diastolic alone
but the pulse pressure which we wish to keep informed about. In pneumonia we
have tried out Gibson's law only to discard it. This so-called law is that in
pneumonia the systolic pressure in millimeters should remain above the figure for
the pulse rate. When the figure in mm. of pressure is equalled by or exceeded by
the pulse rate the prognosis is grave.
In typhoid fever we have made many estimations at various stages of the
disease. We can only say that the pressure picture tends to fall during the course.
The systolic falls more than the diastolic so that it is not uncommon to see pulse
pressures of 20 mm. at the beginning of convalescence in spite of the high caloric
feeding practiced. At the time of perforation the systolic pressure may be raised.
This is only the reflex from the initial pain. Soon the pressure falls and if
peritonitis sets in, the pressure is exceedingly low and the pulse pressure
gradually falls until the circulation can no longer be carried on. In large
hemorrhage the pressure suddenly falls. If only one hemorrhage has occurred a
gradual rise takes place, but the general pressure picture remains at a lower level
for days, gradually returning where it was before the hemorrhage.
In beginning failure of the circulation we found elevation of the foot of the bed
about nine inches to be of such value that we felt there must be some increase in
blood pressure. Numerous readings were made covering a period of several
months. Although we felt certain that the circulation was improved, we rarely
needed cardiac stimulation, we never could prove any increase of blood pressure
with the sphygmomanometer.
In all infectious diseases there is no help offered by blood pressure estimations in
diagnosis. The sole and important use is that of keeping track of the circulation.

Valvular Heart Disease

No rules can be laid down for blood pressure in valvular heart disease. Aortic
stenosis, the rarest of the valvular lesions, is practically always accompanied by
high pressure picture. Mitral stenosis on the contrary usually shows a low
pressure picture. Mitral insufficiency may show an exceedingly low picture or an
exceedingly high picture. Aortic insufficiency also may be accompanied by a high
systolic or by a normal systolic pressure. It depends on the etiology. Practically all
the rheumatic cases have low pressure, the syphilitic cases have a high pressure.
It is characteristic of all cases of aortic insufficiency that the diastolic pressure is
low, even as low as 30 mm. The pulse pressure is invariably high. Usually there is
no difficulty in determining the diastolic pressure. The intense third tone suddenly
becomes dull at the point of diastolic pressure and frequently the dull sound can
be distinctly heard over the artery down to the zero of the scale. If difficulty is
found in reading the diastolic as the pressure is reduced, the estimation may be
reversed and the pressure gradually increased from zero to the point where the
dull tone suddenly becomes loud and clear. These points always coincide.

Kidney Diseases

This has already been discussed somewhat fully in Chapter III and will receive
more consideration later. It might be remarked in passing that in a case of
seeming coma where albumin is found in the urine but where the blood pressure
is low or normal, I have found at autopsy in several cases pyonephrosis and not
chronic nephritis. The blood pressure may be useful in differentiating uremic
coma from the coma of pyonephrosis. Also in the cases of coma with anasarca,
either the acute, subacute or chronic form the blood pressure is not raised as a
rule. Other diseases of the kidney, as tuberculosis, cancer, infection with pyogenic
organisms, are not accompanied with any notable changes in blood pressure.

Other Diseases, Liver, Spleen, Abdomen, etc.

Blood pressure is only of value in the above diseases in affording information


concerning the state of the circulation. There is nothing characteristic about the
pressure in any of these diseases.
CHAPTER VI.
ETIOLOGY

The causes of arteriosclerosis are many and varied. No two persons have the
same resisting power toward poisons that circulate in the blood. Some go through
life exposed to all the infectious diseases without ever becoming infected, while
others fall easy victims to every disease that comes, no matter how careful they
may be, and it is quite the same in regard to the resistance of the arterial tissues.
If the tubing is of first class quality and the individual does not place too much
strain on it, he may live to the biblical three-score years and ten, and possess
arteries which have undergone such slight changes that they are not palpable.
Such a person is, however, the exception. On the other hand, if the tissue is of
poor quality, even the ordinary wear and tear of life causes early changes in the
vessels, and a person of forty may have hard arteries.
We have described in a previous chapter the changes which normally occur in the
arteries as age advances. An artery that is normal for a man of fifty years would
be distinctly abnormal for a boy of fifteen.
Two broad divisions of arteriosclerosis may be made: (1) congenital, or the result
of inherited tendency; (2) acquired.

Congenital Form

When Dr. O. W. Holmes was asked how to live to the age of seventy, he replied
that a man should begin to pick his ancestors one hundred years before he was
born. Our parents determine the character of the tissues with which we start in
life, and this determines our general resistance. We might properly speak of
congenital arteriosclerosis where the affected individual had poor arterial tissue
with which to begin life, for that, in a sense, is a congenital defect, and arterial
tissue that is poor in quality is prone to disease.
The author is more and more impressed with the part that heredity plays in the
determination of arterial degeneration. Especially does syphilis in the parents or
grandparents leave its stigma in the succeeding generations in the shape of poor
arterial tissue which is prone to early degeneration. Recently W. W. Graves has
called attention to a malformation of the vertebral border of the scapula which
consists in a concavity instead of the normal convexity of the bone. To this
malformation he has given the name, scaphoid scapula. He considers this to be
but one manifestation of a general lack of development in the individual. He
speaks of this maldevelopment as a blight and considers that syphilis in the
ancestors is responsible for the condition in the offspring. He finds that even in
children, the subjects of the scaphoid scapula, the arteries are very definitely
thickened. While confirmation of his observations is lacking, there is no doubt
that we must lay the blame for much of the arteriosclerosis in our patients to the
poor quality of arterial tissue transmitted by ancestors who have acquired some
constitutional disease. It may have been syphilis, it may have been the
degeneration produced by alcohol or other drug. We can not ignore the part
which heredity plays. The various factors to be considered in the production of
the acquired form of arteriosclerosis appear to me to be but contributory factors
to a very great extent, the essential and fundamental factor being the quality of
arterial tissue with which the individual is endowed.
Arteriosclerosis may occur in infants. Cases have been reported of calcification of
the arteries in infants and children. The arteriosclerosis may occur without
nephritis or rise of blood pressure. Cerebral hemorrhage in a child of two years
has been seen. Heredity in these cases plays a most important rôle. In many of
the reported cases there was no question of congenital syphilis. Aneurysms,
single or multiple, have been found in the arteries of children, and even the
pulmonary artery may show sclerotic changes.

Acquired Form

As a rule the cases usually seen belong in this group because it seems as if a
connection could be established almost always between one or more of the
etiologic factors to be described and the disease. While this apparently is the
case, we must never lose sight of the part which the quality of the tissue plays.
When we leave this out of our calculations we undoubtedly make many false
deductions. When two men of the same age who have been exposed to the same
conditions as far as we can learn, are found to have quite different arteries, the
one normal, the other thickened, we must postulate congenitally poor tissue on
the part of the latter. Such tissue readily becomes diseased following conditions
which would very likely have produced no noticeable effect on perfectly normal,
healthy tissue.

Hypertension

Hypertension must still be reckoned with in the etiology of arteriosclerosis


although the rôle that it was thought to play does not seem so important.
Changes of blood pressure alone are not considered by many to be sufficient for
the production of arteriosclerosis. This may play some part, but there are many
other factors mostly unknown which determine in any case the production of
arterial lesions.
With every systole of the heart, blood is forced out into the arterial system
against a certain amount of resistance represented by the tonicity of the capillary
area, and the amount of cohesion between the viscous blood and the walls of
arterioles. When a dilatation of the capillaries over any large area takes place, the
blood pressure falls, provided there is no compensatory contraction in other areas
to make up for the decreased resistance in the dilated vessels. The viscosity of
the blood, as such, probably has very little effect on the resistance to the flow.
With the systole of the heart there is a sudden dilatation of the arch of the aorta,
and a wave of expansion follows, which is transmitted to the periphery and is lost
only in the capillaries.
The blood pressure is constantly changing. Physiologically there are relatively
wide variations in the pressure in a perfectly normal individual. There are some
persons who have hypotension, a blood pressure much below the normal. Such
persons have usually small hearts, small aortas, and they seem to have but little
resistance to disease. Many diseases, especially the prolonged fevers, diminish
markedly the blood pressure. Whether the hypertension is the cause of the
structural changes that are found in the walls of the vessels, or is the result of
the diminished area of the arterial tree through which the same amount of blood
has to be driven as before the vessel walls became narrowed, is still disputed. As
has been stated, experimental evidence would tend to place the initial blame
upon the poisons circulating in the blood, which first damage the vessel walls.
The subsequent changes then produce thickening and inelasticity. Some think
(Allbutt) that the hypertension is primary. There are cases seen clinically that lend
support to this view and there is experimental evidence also (v. Chap. II). Not
infrequently individuals in middle life begin to show increase of arterial blood
pressure without discoverable cause. In such case it may be that there is slowly
progressing chronic nephritis. The urine if examined only superficially in single
specimens may not reveal any abnormalities. Careful functional examination by
means of the newer tests may reveal functional deficiency. It must not be
supposed that all cases of increasing hypertension are cases of chronic nephritis.
The opinion has already been expressed (Chap. III) concerning this point.
Experience has convinced me that the opinion expressed in former editions is not
altogether correct.

Age

No age is exempt from the lesions of arteriosclerosis if we consider the two


groups. However, the disease is seen for the most part in persons past middle
life. The relative frequency with which it is found in the different decades
depends on so many factors that it is of no value to tabulate them. As has been
stated, arteriosclerosis of all types is an involution process that advances with
age. Longevity is a question of the integrity of the arterial tissue, and no one can
tell what sort of "vital rubber" (Osler) any one of us has. However, many with
poor tubing may make such use of it that it will outlast good tubing that is badly
treated. Unfortunately we have no way of telling early enough with just what sort
of arterial tissue we are starting life.

Sex

There is no doubt that men are far more prone to arterial disease than women
are; all statistics are in accord on this point. This is explained by the greater
exposure of men to those conditions of life which tend to produce circulatory
strain, and so to produce arteriosclerosis, or vice versa. Arteriosclerosis in women
is not often seen until after the fiftieth year. Cases of the most extreme grade of
pipe stem arteries are, however, seen in old women, and calcified arteries are not
hard to find among the inmates of an old woman's home.

Race

Some of the most beautiful examples of arteriosclerosis in this country are seen
in the negro. Not only is this disease more frequent in the black race, but the age
of onset is much earlier than in the Caucasian. The accidents of arteriosclerosis,
viz., aneurysm, cerebral hemorrhage, etc., are more common among the negro
males. The etiologic factors that are most often found in the history are the
prevalence of syphilis and hard physical labor.

Occupation

Certain occupations have a distinct causal relationship to arteriosclerosis; among


such are particularly those entailing prolonged muscular exercise, especially if
much lifting is necessary. Every one is familiar with the phenomena
accompanying the exertion of lifting. The breath is drawn in, the glottis is closed,
and the muscles of the chest wall are held rigidly while the exertion lasts. This
causes a great increase in blood pressure, and constant repetition of this will
produce permanent high tension. In hospitals, the stevedores as a class have
marked arteriosclerosis, and, almost without exception, they are comparatively
young men. Occupations that are accompanied with prolonged mental strain,
such as now occur to the heads of large manufacturing and financial institutions,
also predispose to early arterial changes. Psychic activity, especially when it is
accompanied by worry, is a potent factor in the production of the increased blood
pressure which is the chief factor in producing arterial disease. It has been
suggested that sexual continence in high-strung men produces changes in the
nervous system which can conceivably lead to the production of high tension and
further to arteriosclerosis. This, however, I can not think has any foundation in
fact except in so far as such men are prone to live at high speed and wear
themselves out sooner than the normal person. The sexual continence per se is
not harmful. There are, however, men who seem not to be harmed by the
constant wear and tear of our modern life. These are the exceptions.
Workers in factories where paint is made and the ingredients hand-mixed, are
prone to develop arteriosclerosis early in life. It has been found that the laborers
most apt to be victims of lead intoxication are those who are careless in their
habits of cleanliness, particularly in regard to the fingernails. The continuous
absorption of lead into the system, brings about a condition of hypertension that
has its inevitable results.
The fact is that any occupation which entails either the absorption of toxic
substances, or prolonged muscular labor, will hasten markedly the onset of
arterial disease.

Food Poisons

The opinion that arteriosclerosis is due in large part to poisoning by end products
or by-products of protein digestion is now receiving much support. Experiments
on dogs and rabbits have lent some confirmation to chemical observations. It has
been shown that dogs fed for a long time on putrefied meat developed
inflammation and degeneration of the adventitia and media, with hyperplasia and
calcification of the intima of many arteries. In the pulmonary and carotid arteries,
in the vena cavas and myocardium, there were extensive necroses and hyaline
degeneration. Moreover, injections of sodium urate and ergot caused necroses in
the muscularis and elastica of the aorta, pulmonary artery, vena cavas inferior
and heart muscle, but there was no calcification. Guinea pigs which were fed
indol in small doses by the mouth over a long period showed atheromatous
degeneration of the aorta.

Infectious Diseases

As more study has been given to the arteries in persons who have died of the
acute infectious diseases, more has come to light concerning the effects of the
toxins of these diseases on the vessel walls. In the arteries of children who have
died of measles, scarlet fever, diphtheria, cerebrospinal meningitis, etc.,
degenerative changes in the arteries occur, modified only by the length of time
that the toxins have acted.
Thayer has shown that the arteries of those who have passed through an attack
of moderately severe or severe typhoid fever are as a rule more readily palpable
than are the vessels of persons of corresponding years who have never had the
disease. Clinically the typhoid toxin appears to cause the early production of
arteriosclerosis. The changes in the arteries occur for the most part, and always
earlier, in the peripheral arteries, and the media is chiefly affected. Minute
yellowish patches are found on the aorta, carotids, and coronaries. In persons
who have passed through an attack of one of the fevers, and have later died from
some other cause, regenerative changes are sometimes found to have taken
place in the arteries, consisting of an ingrowth of elastic fibers from the intact
adventitia to the diseased media.
That there are some other factors than the infectious disease which are
concerned in the production of arterial changes seems evident from a study[14]
made recently among a group of almshouse inmates ranging in age from 38 to 90
years. The study included 500 persons of both sexes. Careful histories were taken
to determine the presence of antecedent infectious disease. The radial artery was
palpated to determine the presence of sclerosis. Among the cases giving a history
of one infectious disease the following table gives the results:
DISEASE
NO. + ++ +++ POSITIVE NEGATIVE
Measles 47 10 6 12 28 19
Infectious
38 9 6 4 19 19
arthritis
Pneumonia 30 5 8 5 18 12
Typhoid 27 6 8 3 17 10
Scarlet fever 10 0 0 4 4 6
Smallpox 14 1 4 0 5 9
Miscellaneous 12 2 5 2 9 3
178 33 37 30 100 78
A summary of the cases showed: 252 cases without sclerosis; 248 with sclerosis;
147 cases with infections but no sclerosis; 180 cases with infections and sclerosis.
This study failed to throw any positive light on the question. Infectious diseases
undoubtedly play a certain rôle, particularly those continuing a long time and
certain particular infectious diseases, as measles.

Syphilis
Syphilis is one of the most important of the etiologic factors in the production of
arteriosclerosis. It has been shown that in 85 per cent of cases of aortic
insufficiency in persons, usually males, over forty-five years, who did not have
chronic infective endocarditis, the Wassermann reaction was positive. Acute
aortitis affecting the ascending and transverse portions of the arch of the aorta is
very commonly seen, and the irregular, scattered, slightly raised, yellowish-white
patches of sclerosis in the arch which are found years after the syphilitic lesion,
are considered by some to be very characteristic of syphilis. Mesaortitis is the
primary lesion and acts as a locus minoris resistentiæ where an aneurysm forms.
Hypertensive cardiovascular cases have been serologically studied, and a positive
Wassermann reaction found in a large percentage of one series. In fifty cases, 90
per cent either gave a positive Wassermann reaction or luetin test, were known
to have syphilis, or had children with hereditary syphilis. This suggests what
might be called "familial cardiovascular syphilis."
Hypertensive disease is possibly one of the common so-called "late"
manifestations of syphilis. That syphilis is responsible for the arterial disease in
the vessels of the brain, resulting in apoplexy or sudden cardiac death in middle
life, has long been known. In fact, it is claimed (Osler) that all aneurysms
occurring in persons under thirty years of age are due to syphilitic aortitis. In the
late stages of syphilis the arterial lesions may be of a diffuse character.

Chronic Drug Intoxications

Lead, tobacco, and according to some, tea and coffee, are to be classed as causal
factors in the production of arteriosclerosis. Certain it is that all these substances
have a tendency to raise the arterial pressure, but whether the drug itself causes
first a degeneration, and later a hypertension results, or vice versa, is not yet
positively known. We have just mentioned that lead particularly has a marked
effect in producing arterial lesions. Other drugs as adrenalin, barium chloride,
physostigmin, etc., while producing experimental arteriosclerosis, hardly could
produce the disease in man. Alcohol has been blamed for much, and as an
etiologic factor in the production of arteriosclerosis formerly was accorded a first
place. More recently much doubt has been thrown on this supposition by the
work of Cabot, who showed that the mere drinking of even large quantities of
spirits had no effect in producing arterial disease.
This observation has been recently substantiated by Hultgen, who carefully
studied clinically 460 cases of chronic alcoholism. He says, "There are no
cardiovascular symptoms which might be termed characteristic of chronic
alcoholism, unless it be the peculiar fetal qualities of the heart sounds which we
know as embryocardia. I find this very frequent among drinkers, but I can offer
only a tentative explanation for it, namely the following: Embryocardia can only
occur with low tension blood pressure, and in the absence of renal insufficiency.
Hence it might be considered as a useful condition of no pathologic significance
at all. That alcohol is a sclerogenic pharmakon and productive of arteriosclerosis
with its usual train of symptoms may be a fact, but its demonstration would be
difficult and is really not shown by my tabulations. There were cardiovascular
changes, such as myocarditis, aortitis, valvular heart disease and arteriosclerosis
in chronic alcoholics in 54.3 per cent of 461 cases, but this by no means
constitutes a proof of the causal relationship between these lesions and the
abuse of liquors. I believe it, nevertheless, to be good reasoning to ascribe the
bulk of cardiovascular symptoms to the sclerogenic action of alcohol, while
abstaining from an interpretation of its pathogenesis." Just what rôle tobacco
plays is difficult to say. My own opinion is, that of itself when used in moderation,
it has no ill effects. However, as tobacco is a drug that may raise the blood
pressure, excessive use must be held responsible for the production of
arteriosclerosis. It is difficult to separate its effects from those produced by eating
and drinking.

Overeating

There can be no doubt but that the constant overloading of the stomach with rich
or difficultly digestible food is responsible for a large number of cases of
arteriosclerosis. Every one must have noted the increase in force and volume of
the heart beat after the ingestion of a large meal. The constant repetition of such
processes conceivably can lead to damage to the vessel walls through
hypertension.
In the metabolism of food in the intestines there are substances produced which
are poisonous when absorbed directly into the circulation. Ordinarily these
substances are rendered harmless either before absorption or are detoxicated in
the liver to harmless substances. It is conceivable that a constant overproduction
of such poisons would eventually damage the defensive mechanism of the body
to such an extent that some of the poisons would circulate in the blood. An
expression of a surplus of one, at least, of these decomposition products is the
appearance of indican in the urine. It is not believed that indicanuria has the
importance attached to it which some authors would have us believe. It is found
too often and in too many varying conditions, nevertheless it undoubtedly does
reveal the presence of perverted metabolism.
In how far the toxins absorbed from the intestinal tract are responsible for the
production of arterial disease, it is not possible to say. Some observers lay great
stress on this factor as a cause of arteriosclerosis. The author believes that the
rôle played by the absorption of products of perverted intestinal metabolism is an
important one. The primary change is an increased tension in the arterioles which
later leads to thickening of the coats of the vessels and to the other
consequences of arterial disease. A vicious circle is thus established which has a
tendency to become progressively worse.

Mental Strain

More and more does one become impressed with the fact that patients with
arteriosclerosis are very often those who take life too seriously and either from
ambition or from an exalted sense of duty lead especially strenuous lives. Not
always are these persons addicted to drug or liquor habit. Many are rather
abstemious in their habits. It is not so often that we see as a victim of
arteriosclerosis, the carefree person who laughs his way through life without
worrying about the morrow. He is not so prone to arteriosclerosis. Worry is a far
more potent cause of breakdown than actual manual work. It is the rule to find
thickened arteries among neurasthenics. This may be only part of a generalized
degeneration of all tissue in the body. The blood pressure in such persons is
usually low. So many men of our better class live under a continuous mental
strain in the business world. The increase in arteriosclerosis cases is real, not
apparent. The intense mental strain seems to cause a marked increase in blood
pressure (for short periods of mental effort this has been proved) over a period of
time sufficient to cause permanent changes in the vessel walls. The same
sequence of events repeats itself; high tension, arterial strain, compensatory
thickening, hypertrophied heart, etc.
Certainly the character of the arterial tissue has much to do with the
determination of degenerative changes which may result from the action of one
or more of the etiologic factors.

Muscular Overwork

Muscular overwork is to be reckoned with as an etiologic factor. One sees it


especially among the laboring class in both whites and negroes. Possibly other
factors, as alcohol and coarse heavy food, contribute to the early arterial
degeneration. Hypertrophy of the heart occurs in athletes, and statistics gathered
among the oarsmen especially, show a relatively high mortality at the different
decades traceable to the high tension produced while in training. This question
deserves more consideration than has been accorded it.

Renal Disease
Chronic disease of the kidneys (contracted red kidney) is one of the most certain
producers of hypertension; in fact, some maintain that high tension, even without
demonstrable kidney lesions, as revealed by careful urine examinations, is a
valuable sign pointing to chronic nephritis. This is doubted by others, myself
among them. Just what causes the increase in blood pressure sometimes to over
270 mm. of Hg, is not definitely known. It seems most probable that it is some
poison elaborated by the diseased kidneys and absorbed into the general
circulation. There it acts primarily on the musculature of the arterioles causing
tonic contraction and an increase of work on the part of the heart to force the
blood through narrowed channels. One fact is certain. We see patients in coma
due to renal disease with blood pressure much over 200 mm of Hg. As these
cases clear up, the pressure may fall, and should they seemingly recover, the
recovery is accompanied with a marked decrease in blood pressure, finally
reaching the normal for the individual. Moreover, in the course of a severe acute
or subacute nephritis, hypertension is associated with headache, partial or total
blindness, and drowsiness. When the pressure is reduced, all these symptoms
disappear.
There is also the chronically shrunken and scarred kidney known pathologically as
the arteriosclerotic kidney. It is probable that there are two groups of cases which
we may designate: (1) primary; (2) secondary. In the primary group the kidney
disease antedates the sclerosis of the arteries, and the sclerosis is most probably
dependent on the constant high tension. We know that prolonged hypertension
will produce severe forms of arteriosclerosis. The arterial disease in this group is
caused by the renal disease.
In the second group the kidney changes are apparently due to the general
arteriosclerosis which, affecting the kidney vessels, causes changes leading to
atrophy and subsequent fibrous tissue ingrowth of scattered areas. These cases
are not necessarily associated with hypertension; on the contrary there is more
apt to be hypotension. Where the first group occurs for the most part in young
and active middle-aged people, the second group is the result of involutionary
processes which accompany advanced age.
However careful a urinalysis may be, there is no assurance that one can predict
the pathologic state of the kidney. Often so-called normal urine will be secreted
by a badly diseased kidney, whereas a urine which contains considerable albumin
and many casts may be secreted by a kidney which is only temporarily the seat of
inflammation. What matters after all is not the state of the kidney which the
pathologist describes, but the actual functional response of the kidney in the
body to the various tests now well known.

Ductless Glands
At the present time the tendency among some writers is to make the ductless
glands the responsible agents in almost all diseases. Arteriosclerosis is no
exception to this tendency. Sajous, for example, divides the morbid process
producing arteriosclerosis into three types; (1) autolytic, (2) adrenal, (3)
denutrition. In the first type he finds the pancreas to be the most important
gland. It supplies an internal secretion which "takes a direct part in the protein
metabolism of the tissue cells, and also in the defensive reactions within these
cells, as well as in the phagocytes and in the blood stream." This being the case
exaggeration of this digestive process has tissue destruction as its result,
arteriosclerosis among them.
In the adrenal type Sajous argues that adrenalin produces lesions experimentally,
therefore the adrenal gland has a profound influence by its internal secretion in
connection with the sympathetic system in producing degenerations leading to
arteriosclerosis.
The denutrition type has as its particular gland the thyroid. The sclerotic process
in the arteries is due to the lack of thyroid as in cases of myxedema. After a long
résumé of his ideas he concludes "that arteriosclerosis is the result of excessive
or deficient activity of certain ductless glands, the thyroid and adrenal in
particular."
No one can dogmatically deny the part which the ductless glands may play in the
production of arteriosclerosis, but it hardly seems that there is enough actual
experimental evidence to show that they take such an important part as Sajous
believes. Until further and more convincing evidence is offered by competent
investigators, I prefer to look with some skepticism upon the ductless gland
theory of the causation of arteriosclerosis. The field lends itself too easily to
speculation and imagery. Some are already allowing themselves the mental
debauch of this nature.
CHAPTER VII.
THE PHYSICAL EXAMINATION OF THE HEART AND ARTERIES

Heart Boundaries

In order to be able to estimate the departures from normal in the boundaries of


the heart, it is essential that there be a definite appreciation of the boundaries of
the normal heart in relation to the chest wall.
It is frequently stated that the right limit of cardiac dullness is normally, in the
adult, just at the right border of the sternum. This is not strictly accurate. Careful
dissections at the autopsy table and x-ray plates of the chest made at a distance
of two meters from the tube show that the border of the right auricle is from one
to one and a half and even two centimeters from the edge of the sternum at the
level of the fourth rib, and on the living subject this can be also demonstrated.
The right border of the heart usually is from 3 to 4 cm. from the midsternal line
at the level of the fourth rib.
Again there is a term used in defining the apex, known as the point of maximum
impulse. As this does not always coincide with the apex beat and with the outer
lower left border of the heart, it would be better to use the term apex beat.
Normally, then, the cardiac dullness, the so-called relative cardiac dullness, begins
above at the upper border of the third costal cartilage, as a rule, and taking a
somewhat curved line with the concavity inward, descends to the fifth interspace
or beneath the fifth rib from 9 to 10 cm. from a line drawn through the center of
the sternum parallel to its length, the midsternal line. This seems to me to be a
better method of recording the size of the heart than by the lines commonly
used; viz., the nipple, or midclavicular, or parasternal line. Below, the cardiac
dullness is merged into the tympany from the stomach and the dullness from the
liver. At the sixth right costosternal articulation there is a sharp turn upwards
forming at that point with the liver the cardiohepatic angle. At the fourth right
cartilage or the third interspace, the dullness is from one to two centimeters from
the edge of the sternum. We have then a somewhat pear-shaped area or
triangular area with the apex at the apex of the heart. The so-called absolute
cardiac dullness does not appear to me to be of any great significance. In reality
it is the limit of lung resonance and may be greater or less, not so much on
account of variations in the size of the heart, as of variations in size of the lungs
and shape of the chest wall.
The really crucial question which should always be asked is, Is the heart enlarged
or decreased in size? The position of the apex beat alone can not determine this,
neither can the limit to the right of the sternum. The distance between these two
points and the depth of the dullness at a distance of 5 cm. from the midsternal
line on the left side, will give the size of the heart as nearly as can be obtained in
the living subject. A series of measurements in normal adults average 13 to 14
cm. and 9 to 10 cm. respectively. For women they are about 1 cm. less in each
direction.
The elaborate mechanism known as the orthodiagraph is probably the best
means of determining the actual limits of the heart, but few men have such an
expensive instrument, and, moreover, at the bedside such an instrument could
not be used. From comparative measurements I concur in the belief of those who
affirm that careful percussion will furnish equally as accurate limits.
The first step in making an examination of the heart is to expose the patient's
chest in a good light, and, sitting at his right side, carefully inspect the chest. The
position of the apex beat, heaving, bulging, retraction of interspaces, etc., can
easily be seen if visible. After careful inspection has given all the data which it is
possible to obtain, one next lays the palm of the hand over the heart and
attempts to palpate the apex beat. The thrust of the apex in a hypertrophied
heart can readily be felt, and one can feel whether the heart is regular, irregular,
intermittent, or has other change in rhythm. The shock of the closing valves,
particularly the aortic, can be felt, and that and the forcible apical impulse are
very suggestive signs of hypertrophy and hypertension. Thrills may also be felt
and can be timed in relation to the heart cycle.

Percussion

It is to percussion that we next proceed, and for the data in regard to the size of
the heart, it is, for our purpose, the most valuable of all the physical methods of
heart examination.
First and foremost we wish by percussion to learn the actual size of the heart, in
other words what is ordinarily called the relative cardiac dullness. With the
absolute dullness we are not concerned. That irregular area represents, as has
been said, actually the limits of lung resonance. The heart may or may not be
covered with lung; there may or may not be the incisura cardiaca. What I wish to
insist upon is that the size of the area of absolute dullness can give us no data in
regard to the size of the heart. What we must endeavor to learn is the actual size
of the heart as nearly as our crude means will permit.
Light, very light, almost inaudible percussion, what Goldscheider called
"Schwellungsperkussion," must be practiced. Use the middle finger of the right
(left) hand as the hammer and the last joint of the middle finger of the left (right)
hand pressed firmly against the chest, as pleximeter. I believe it is better to place
the pleximeter finger parallel to the boundary to be limited although some place
the finger perpendicularly, that is, pointing toward the boundary. Now and then it
helps to bend the pleximeter finger at the second joint, hold it perpendicularly to
the chest wall, and strike the joint directly in line of the finger. This in my hands
has been of great assistance in percussing the limits of the heart dullness.
Pottenger's "light touch palpation" is a modification of the light palpation and, to
my mind, has no very special advantages. Auscultatory percussion is of great
value at times. The bell of the stethoscope is placed over the portion of heart
uncovered by lung (should such be the case), and with this point as a center the
chest is lightly and quickly tapped along radii converging toward the stethoscope.
One soon learns to recognize the change of pitch as the tapping reaches the
border of the heart. It is well to use all methods, especially in difficult cases, and
to compare the results. Personally I have found that by light percussion I can
limit with much accuracy the upper, right, and left borders of the heart.
There is much to be gained by using light percussion. Strong blows set in
vibration not only the underlying structures, but also more or less of the chest
wall. We wish to avoid this source of error, we do not wish to differentiate by
pitch alone. Finally one's pleximeter finger becomes, after long practice, so
sensitive to changes in the resonance of structures lying below it, that there is
actual feeling of impairment to the slightest degree. This delicate touch is what
we should endeavor to cultivate.
It is at times of advantage to use immediate percussion. This is done by bending
the fingers of the striking hand, bringing the tips in a line and striking the chest
lightly with the four fingers as one finger. Some find it easier to percuss the
dullness due to the heart in this way than by mediate percussion.
The little hammer and hard rubber, celluloid, bone, or ivory pleximeter does not
seem to me to be nearly as good as the fingers. Moreover, one always has his
hands, but may forget his hammer and pleximeter.

Auscultation

In auscultating the heart I prefer the binaural stethoscope of the Ford pattern.
The recent substitution of an aluminum bell for the hard rubber bell is an
improvement. Personally I do not favor the phonendoscope or any of the new
patent non-roaring instruments now for sale by urgent instrument makers. The
phonendoscope has its uses, for example in auscultating the back when a patient
is lying in bed or in listening to the heart sounds when a patient is under an
anesthetic; but for differentiating the murmurs and for heart diagnosis, I much
prefer the regular bell stethoscope.
In arteriosclerosis the two places over which it is important to listen are the apex
and the second right cartilage, the aortic area. Over the former, one gains data in
regard to the strength of the heart as indicated by the first sound, over the latter
point, one learns of the tension in the aorta by the character of the sound
produced when the aortic valves close.
The hypertrophy of the heart in arteriosclerosis is invariably due to the
enlargement and thickening of the left ventricle. From the nature of the position
which the heart assumes in the thorax, this enlargement is downward and to the
left. The apex beat will therefore be found in the fifth or sixth interspace, and
definitely at an increased distance from the midsternal line. As stated above, it is
most important that this distance be accurately measured and put down in the
notes of the case for future reference. No satisfactory prognosis can be given
unless this is done, for the gradual increase or the decrease under treatment in
the size of the heart can thus be definitely known, and, knowing the other
factors, a prognosis may be given which will be of some value to the patient.

The Examination of the Arteries

It is exceedingly difficult at times to affirm definitely that an artery, the radial for
example, is actually sclerosed. Much depends on the sensitiveness of the fingers
of him who palpates, and much upon the relation of the palpated artery to the
surrounding, chiefly underlying, structures. In the examination of arteries it is
well to inspect the body for the pulsations caused by them. Frequently an
exceedingly tortuous artery, such as the brachial, may be seen throughout its
whole extent and yet the radial appear little, if any, thickened by palpation. Again
the artery of a pulse of high tension which is small in size but full between the
beats, may not be as sclerosed as one which collapses and feels much softer. It is
difficult to obtain accurate data in regard to the tension in an artery by feeling it
with the fingers of one hand. One should use both hands. With the middle finger
of the right (left) hand the artery is compressed peripherally, that is, nearest the
wrist. The blood is then pressed out of the artery with the middle finger of the
left (right) hand, so as to obliterate completely the pulse wave and the two or
three inches between the middle fingers are felt with the index fingers. By
holding the finger firmly on the artery near the wrist so as to block any wave that
may come through the palmar arch by anastomosis with the ulnar artery and by
releasing pressure on the proximal middle finger, some idea may be had of the
degree of pulse tension. However, no amount of practice can more than
approximate the tension and when one is surest that he can tell how many

You might also like