GLANDERS (EQUINIA GRAVIOR, FARCY).
BY JAMES LAW, F.R.C.V.S.
SYNONYMS.—Greek, [Greek: malis]. Latin, Malleus, Equinia Nasalis, E. Apostimatos, Farcinia. French, Morve, Farcin. German, Rotz, Lungenrotz, Hautrotz, Wurm, Hautwurm. Italian, Morva, Moccis, Cimurro. Spanish, Cimorro, Lamparones.
DEFINITION.—An infectious, bacteridian disease occurring in the horse, ass, or mule, and communicated by inoculation to various other animals, including man. It is usually ushered in by rigors, followed by articular pains, lameness, and the formation of a specific deposit in the lymphatic system of some part of the body, with a tendency to destructive degeneration and ulceration. In the form known as glanders these deposits and ulcers take place mainly in the nasal mucosa, in the lungs, and in adjacent glands, while in that known as farcy the deposits occur in the cutaneous and subcutaneous lymphatic plexuses and the dependent glands.
HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION.—Under the name of malis Aristotle describes a fatal disease of asses, supposed to have been identical with the malleus humidus of Vegetius Renatus and other writers of early Christian times, and with the cymoira of other early Roman writers. This malady was characterized by swelling of the submaxillary glands and discharge from nose and mouth. From the fourteenth century onward glanders is reported from different parts of Europe at frequent intervals; thus in 1320 in England (Rogers); in 1640 in Badajoz, brought by Portugese horses (Villalba); in 1686 at Treves (Eggerdes); again in 1776 in Southern France (Lafosse); in 1794 in Bavaria (Plank); in 1796 in Franconia (Laubender); and in 1798 in Piedmont (Toggia). At the beginning of the present century this affection was very widely prevalent in Great Britain, the chronic cases being habitually worked in stage-coaches, but of recent years, when it has been made criminal to expose or use a glandered horse, the malady has to a great extent disappeared. To-day glanders is almost coexistent with the distribution of the domesticated equine family, yet its prevalence bears a direct relation to the facilities for infection (horse-traffic, war, preservation of the diseased, confinement in close stables, ships, etc.), and some countries appear to be entirely free from the affection. Thus, Krabbe gives the yearly losses per 100,000 horses for the principal countries of Europe and Algiers as follows: Norway, 6; Denmark, 8.5; England, 14; Sweden, 57; Wurtenberg, 77; Prussia, 78; Saxony, 95; Belgium, 138; France (army), 1130; Algeria (army), 1548. The losses in Prussia more than doubled after the Franco-German War; thus, in 1869-70 they were 966, and in 1873-74, 2058. In Bavaria they rose in the same period from 173 to 390 (Hahn). In Lisbon, Portugal, glanders was unknown for the thirty years preceding the Peninsular War, whereas after the war it proved a veritable scourge (Saunier). Charles Percivall, during an eight years' residence at Meerut and Cawnpore, Hindostan, saw not a single case of glanders, and so late as 1275, Fleming claims an entire immunity for India; yet in 1877 complaints were numerous of the very general prevalence of the disease in Upper India especially, while in 1879 the campaign in Afghanistan was seriously affected by its ravages. Climate appears to have little influence. The disease is virtually unknown in the island of Bornholm with 7000 horses, and in the Faroes and Iceland with 35,000, while it is quite frequent in Sweden. It is unknown in Australia, but is very prevalent in China, South Africa, Abyssinia, and Algiers, and but little known in Asia Minor, Arabia, and Egypt.
In the United States as in Europe the disease has mainly concentrated itself in the large cities in times of peace, and spread widely on the advent of war. It is alleged that it first entered Mexico in 1847 with the American cavalry, though with the horses kept in the open air it failed to gain a wide extension. The horses and mules drawn into the Union armies in 1861 brought infection with them, and soon the disease was most prevalent and destructive, not only in the ranks, but in every State in which the armies operated. John R. Page says the first case he saw in the Confederate army was a captured Federal troop-horse on the retreat from Manassas, and that the breaking down of the Confederate cavalry in the last two years of the war was mainly due to glanders. At the close of the war the sale of army horses distributed the infection widely through all the States, North as well as South. Every year in a country district in Western New York I see several cases of glanders, and occasionally a whole stud is carried off through an infected purchase. In other States the case is no better. In Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, and Michigan cases are constantly seen in the country districts, and in the three last-named States five human victims have been reported within a short period. In Connecticut the same is true, and the disease made one human victim in Waterbury in 1879. In the large cities the case is still worse. Liautard of New York in 1878, in a single visit to one car-stable, condemned 8 horses, in another stable 18, and in a third, at two visits, 45, while a fourth had lost no fewer than 200 horses in the course of one year from glanders. In the Troy (N.Y.) car-stables the malady prevailed from 1875-77, most of the subjects suffering from chronic farcy, until in the latter year, by my advice, these propagators of contagion were destroyed. In Springfield, Mass., in 1879, the disease assumed such alarming proportions that it was vigorously suppressed by a city ordinance enjoining summary slaughter. These are but indications of what is happening all over the country, entailing losses of many hundreds of thousands yearly as well as an enormous risk to humanity.
The following table gives the number of cases occurring in the equine family in two of the principal countries of Europe in the last few years:
| Cases of Glanders in— | Great Britain. | Germany. |
| 1878 | 888 | 2753 |
| 1879 | 1367 | |
| 1880 | 2048 | 1941 |
| 1881 | 1710 | 1774 |
| 1882 | 1389 | 1838 |
As both countries systematically suppress this disease through their veterinary sanitary officials, it cannot be doubted that the figures for America, if obtainable, would be relatively higher.
Glanders prevails especially in horses, asses, mules, and other solipedes, and is communicated by inoculation to all domestic animals except the genus Bovis. In the sheep and goat the receptivity is considerable, and the disease may prove fatal in fifteen days (Gerlach) or it may be delayed for seven weeks (Bollinger). The Carnivora (dogs, cats, lions, polar bears) contract the affection by eating diseased flesh, as do some rodents (prairie-dogs, rabbits, guinea-pigs, mice), and, by administration, solipedes. Swine contract the disease by inoculation (Gerlach, Spinola), though in these and in the dog the constitutional symptoms are usually slight and recovery may follow the local affection.
The susceptibility of man is doubtless less than that of the solipedes, judging from the few cases of glanders compared with the frequent exposures, yet when once established in the system it can hardly be said to be less malignant or fatal.
ETIOLOGY.—The one known cause of glanders is contagion, and the recent experiments of Capitan and Charrin in France and of Schütz and Löfler in Germany, demonstrating that the bacillus of the glanderous deposits is the one essential cause of the disease, effectually dispose of any claim of its spontaneous origin. Glanders can no longer be considered spontaneous, further than that its germ is now proved capable, like that of anthrax, of survival and multiplication out of the animal economy, so that infection may come from other objects than a sick animal; and it may even yet appear that the bacillus, living at times as a harmless saprophyte out of the animal body, may acquire deadly properties under certain conditions of the environment. At the same time, the most extensive acquaintance with glanders and the broadest generalizations from known facts do not warrant the assumption of the extension of the disease by the growth of the bacillus out of the living body, unless it be on the rarest possible occasions, while the soundness of extensive countries (Australia, New Zealand) for a century or more speaks strongly against any frequent development from a harmless saprophyte.
To the same effect speak the experiences of the English army. At the beginning of the century, under the teaching of Coleman, most cases were attributed to lack of stable care, and extensive experiments were made in the treatment of the disease, with the result of a very high mortality from this cause. Now, when contagion is looked on as the main or sole cause, and all suspected horses in the army are promptly destroyed, the disease is only seen in recently-purchased animals or after the inevitable exposures of a campaign.1 In the French army the doctrine of the non-contagiousness of chronic glanders led to a greater prevalence of this disease than in any other country of Europe. Prior to 1836 it was about 90 per 1000 per annum, whereas now, under the doctrine of contagion and a corresponding practice, glanders kills but 2 per 1000 per annum (Rossignol).
1 Wilkinson, Jour. of Roy. Agr. Soc., No. 50.
But while the essential cause of glanders is the specific bacillus, an individual susceptibility is no less requisite to an attack. This may be innate or acquired. As we have seen, it varies according to the genus, being greatest in the solipede. But many solipedes show a strong power of resistance. Of 138 horses similarly exposed by cohabitation with glandered horses, but 29 (21 per cent.) suffered. Of 28 inoculated with glanders virus, but 9 (32 per cent.) succumbed (Lamirault, Bagge, Tscherning). The accessory causes which predispose the system to the reception of glanders may be included under one general term—low condition and ill health. Three of these causes, however, deserve especial mention: 1st. Impure and rebreathed air. Prior to 1836 the yearly losses per 1000 of the French army horses were from 180 to 197. At the date named the ventilation of the stables was greatly improved, and the mortality fell to 68 per 1000 per annum, one-half from glanders. Later improvements have reduced the 34 cases to 2. During the Italian War, in 1859, 10,000 of these horses were kept for nine months in open sheds, with but one case of glanders.2 In the expedition to Quibéron during the Napoleonic wars, a cavalry contingent, believed to be healthy, shipped on new transports, encountered a storm, and had the hatches fastened down, so that several horses were suffocated. Among the survivors, landed at Southampton and placed in stables hitherto unchallenged, many soon developed glanders in its worst form. Similar results followed the English expeditions to Varna in 1854, and that to Abyssinia in 1867. In badly-ventilated mines and stables, especially cellar stables, glanders, once started, is always most virulent.
2 Larrey, Hyg. des Hop. Mil., 1862, p. 63.
2d. Cold, damp, draughty stables greatly favor the progress of glanders. Leblanc reports the case of a stud of 240 horses that had had no glanders for eight years, but which lost half their number in three months after removal into a new stable, very lofty, but dark and damp, and subject to cold draughts. It is worthy of notice that they had also been subjected to double work, and were consequently emaciated, but there was not known to be any unusual exposure to contagion. In a Boston street-car stable, where glanders had long prevailed, Thayer cut it short by destroying the infected animals and by improving the ventilation by windows hung at the bottom and opening inward, so that the air entered in an upward direction, and cold draughts on the horses were avoided.
3d. Debility from ill-health, low feeding, or overwork.—The nervous and nutritive debility consequent on chronic disease, overwork, and exhaustion lessens the power of resistance to specific poisons, but in such circumstances there is always the added predisposition of an excess of waste material in the blood, a specially abundant food for the disease-germ. So notorious is this that it used to be held that the specific poison of glanders was generated in connection with the excess of creatine, creatinine, and lactic acid resulting from muscular action. Of the effect of low diet we have a striking example, furnished by Bouley, of a stud of 120 horses, 60 of which were attacked within a year after they had been placed on a food insufficient to repair the body-waste, and from which the disease disappeared after the slaughter of the infected and improvement of the ration. So long as glandered horses were preserved for work, the then nearly ubiquitous germ attacked nearly all that were run down by chronic diseases; hence glanders was looked upon as the natural winding up of exhausting diseases in the horse, as tuberculosis was thought to be in the human subject. Modern discovery shows that without the germ all such debilitating causes are impotent, but it can never disprove the great potency of these in laying the system open to attack, nor the value of vigorous health and sound hygiene in fortifying the system against it.
The channel of infection manifestly varies in different cases. In direct inoculations the morbid process develops first at the point of insertion, and secondly in the nearest lymphatic glands and internal organs. When contracted in the ordinary way, the lesions are usually first seen in the posterior nasal passages, the larynx or the lungs, or in the superficial lymphatics, especially of the hind limbs. This susceptibility of the deeper portions of the air-passages seems to imply that the bacillus, borne on the air, is lodged on different parts of the respiratory mucous membrane, and first sets up the morbid process in the thinnest or most susceptible portion. That it can be thus borne on the air is shown by the experiments of Viborg and Gerlach, who separately collected the particulate elements from the exhalations of glandered horses and successfully inoculated them. That the virus is not usually carried far on the air in a virulent form is attested by the many instances in which horses have stood for months in the same stable with a glandered animal without becoming infected. That infection may also take place through the ingestion of infected matters is undoubted, as glanderous products mixed with food, or even made into balls and enclosed in paper and administered to horses in this form, have produced the disease. The virulence is said to be lost by passing through the digestive canal of man (Decroix), dog, pig, and fowl (Renault), but even to Carnivora the infection may be conveyed in the food.
While the virus is concentrated in the material of the special glanderous deposits and the discharges from these, yet no part of the body can be considered as free from the poison. Viborg, Coleman, Hering, and Chauveau have communicated the disease by transfusion of blood from a glandered horse to a healthy one; hence every vascular organ must be liable to infect. The secretions of the diseased body (tears, saliva, mucus, sweat, urine, and milk) have each been successfully inoculated, and the conveyance of the disease to the foetus in utero and to the female by coition imply that even the generative secretions are virulent. Failures to convey the disease by inoculation with the blood and secretions have often occurred, however, and they must be held as less virulent than the products of the local disease-processes.
The claims that inoculation with pus, ichor, and other irritants have produced glanders must be entirely discredited. The deposits and ulcers in the lungs and elsewhere resulting from such inoculations have been either septicæmia, mistaken for glanders in the earlier days of pathological anatomy; or the septic and other inflammations set up by these inoculations have merely served as fertile spots for the planting and growth of the glanders bacillus accidentally present, and which to a healthy system might have proved harmless.
In 1882, Chauveau had demonstrated the particulate nature of the glander germ by his unsuccessful inoculations with the liquids filtered from dilutions of pus taken from a pulmonary glanderous ulcer. The filtrate and the liquid mixture formed by mixing the pus with five hundred times its own weight of water retained their virulence undiminished. In 1868, Christol and Kiener discovered in glanderous products a bacillus which they figured as made up of a chain of nearly globular elements apparently enclosed in a common sheath. In 1881-82, Bouchard, Capitan, and Charrin cultivated these microphytes in a neutralized extract of meat through five successive cultures, using in each case a milligramme of the previous culture, or less than 1/1000 part of the culture-liquid. Counting that the milligramme of pus would give to each centigramme of the first culture-liquid 1,000,000,000 bacilli, it follows that the second culture would, on the principle of dilution, contain 1,000,000, the third 1000, the fourth 1, while for the fifth it was as 999 to 1 that it would receive nothing unless the germ were multiplied in the culture-liquid. Inoculation of a cat with this fifth culture, started originally from a nasal ulcer of a glandered horse, led to a fatal result in twenty-five days, with suppurating tumor of the left testicle and inguinal glands. The products of the first cat were inoculated on a second, those of the last on a third, those of the third on a guinea-pig, and those of the guinea-pig on an ass, producing in every case specific lesions of glanders, including miliary nodules and abscesses, and death respectively on the following days: 16, 7, 31, and 10.
In September, 1882, and the two succeeding months, a similar course of experiments was conducted by Schütz and Löfler at Berlin. The virulent matter used for starting the culture was procured from a pulmonary deposit and spleen of a glandered horse; the cultivation was continued through eight successive culture-fluids. One horse was successfully inoculated with the product of the eighth culture, and a second with both the fifth and eighth. The first died on the fifty-eighth day, and the second, now very weak, was sacrificed on the fifty-ninth. Both showed the most extensive lesions of glanders alike in the skin, the lymphatic glands, the pituitary and laryngeal mucous membrane, and the lungs. To demonstrate the bacillus they take a thin layer of the infecting liquid on a cover glass, dry it, stain with methyl violet, wash with dilute acetic acid, dehydrated by absolute alcohol, and clear by oil of cedar. Like other pathogenic microphytes this may be preserved for months or years if thoroughly dried, but in the moist condition it is easily destroyed by heat (133° F.; Viborg, Hofacker, Renault), chlorine, and the disinfectant chlorides and sulphites.
SYMPTOMS.—Acute nasal glanders in horses has a period of incubation lasting from three to five days in inoculated cases. Where in infected subjects the incubation appears to have extended over months or a year, there have usually (or always) been deposits in internal organs which passed without recognition until the lesions appeared in the nose. At the outset there is fever, which appears before any local lesions are recognizable, even post-mortem (Chauveau), and soon with languor, and loss of appetite, there is a serous nasal discharge, often from one side only. By the sixth day this has become yellowish, the margin of the nostril is often swollen, and upon the pituitary membrane may be detected elevations of various sizes of a general yellowish tinge, dotted with minute red points and surrounded by a bright-red or purple and slightly elevated areola. These may be simple, pea-like nodules or more or less extensive patches, which in certain cases extend over nearly the whole pituitary membrane. At the same time the submaxillary lymphatic glands on the same side become the seat of a hard nodular painless enlargement, feeling like a conglomerate mass of peas, and often showing a tendency to become more closely adherent to some adjacent part (bone, skin, base of tongue); but they only ulcerate exceptionally. Extensive hot, painful engorgements also often appear on other parts of the body, and if on the limbs or joints cause lameness. Soon the swellings on the mucosa become eroded and are gradually destroyed, forming large unhealthy, chancrous-looking ulcers, tending to become confluent and to eat deeply through the mucosa into the subjacent tissues. These are mostly reddish gray or yellowish gray, with raised ragged red or yellowish-red margins. They bleed readily, and may be black from hemorrhage, or greenish or of some other shade from decomposition. The discharge is always somewhat glutinous and sticky, but it may vary in color from simple white to yellowish, greenish, brownish, or red, according to the destruction of tissue, the septic changes, or the effusion of blood.
By the sixth to the fifteenth day the acme has been reached. The alæ of the nostrils are glued together by the drying discharge, and this, with the general swelling of the nasal passages, renders the breathing snuffling and difficult. The lymphatics on the side of the face are usually inflamed and corded, and the same is true of the cutaneous lymphatics of the hind limbs of some other part of the body (farcy). Death usually ensues from suffocation, preceded by the most painful dyspnoea.
Chronic glanders in horses often sets in insidiously, but frequently also it first shows itself by constitutional disturbance, which gradually subsides as the local lesions are formed. Among frequent premonitory symptoms may be mentioned intermittent or continued lameness, oedema of one or more limbs, infiltration of the testicle, cough, and bleeding from the nose. The general health may appear good, and if in good hygienic condition the digestion and nutrition may be sufficient, the body plump, and the skin shining; but there is usually some dulness of the eye, dryness of the coat, lack of endurance, and a tendency to sweat easily and to run down rapidly under hard work or debilitating conditions. The discharge, at first clear, becomes turbid, grayish, sticky, and purulent, tending to agglutinate the hairs and edges of the alæ nasi, and is expelled by snorting in masses. The nasal mucosa, and especially over the septum, is the seat of the peculiar elevations, ulcers, and firm white, condensed deposits resembling cicatrices, usually low enough down to be seen or felt. The submaxillary lymphatic glands are the seat of the nodular enlargement described in acute glanders, and, as in that affection, there may be pulmonary or skin deposits shown by cough or oedema, with swelling and cording of the cutaneous lymphatics with nodules and ulcers.
These cases often maintain this indolent type for years, spreading the infection widely, but they tend sooner or later to develop the acute type, especially under some debilitating conditions.
When the mucous membrane of the larynx and bronchi is first attacked the nasal lesions may be delayed for a time, but the cough, the variously colored tenacious expectoration, the excessive tenderness of the larynx, and the nodular enlargement of the adjacent lymphatic glands, with the general ill-condition, suggest that which is later confirmed by the specific lesions in nose and skin.
When the affection is confined to the bronchia and pulmonary parenchyma, there are the usual signs of bronchitis, disturbed breathing, with hard, soft, mucous, or dry husky cough, and blowing, mucous or sibilant râle, at points crepitation, and at others some diminution of murmur and resonance. The breath is mawkish or fetid, and expectoration more or less sticky and charged with bacilli; but all these symptoms are at times equivocal, and inoculation alone can attest the true nature of the disease. This should be practised by preference on a donkey or an old horse in poor condition but with general good health. Then the disease shows itself in the acute form in six days. If solipedes are not available, rabbits or guinea-pigs may be used for inoculation.
In acute cutaneous glanders or farcy, premonitory symptoms resemble those of ordinary acute glanders, which indeed is usually present as well, and always supervenes before farcy terminates in death. The local lesions consist in inflammation of the lymphatic vessels, which become like firm cords, the appearance at intervals along these cords of rounded glanderous nodules varying in size from a pea to a hickory-nut, and with a marked tendency to ulceration and the formation of hot, painful oedematous swellings. The swelling of the lymphatics appears by preference in the lower part of a hind limb, and the first nodules may be near the fetlock or tarsus. The ulcers forming about the sixth day have a yellowish-white appearance with red points and raised irregular borders, and the discharge is grumous and viscous, with a yellowish or reddish tinge. The disease extends toward the body, the upper air-passages become involved, and death speedily follows.
Chronic cutaneous glanders, chronic farcy, usually begins by a local swelling, mostly of the fetlock, in the midst of which a careful examination detects a small glanderous nodule. This tardily softens, ulcerates, and discharges the characteristic ichor, the lymphatics leading up from it become thick and rigid (corded), and new nodules appear. Though very indolent, these finally tend to ulcerate, and in time oedematous swellings appear in the vicinity or at distant parts of the body, with nodules at intervals. This will go on for months, or even for years, and recoveries occasionally take place, while in other cases, and especially when the conditions of life are bad, acute glanders supervene.
MORBID ANATOMY.—The lesions consist essentially in a cellular growth in the connective tissue, determined by the presence of the specific poison, and in destructive changes in the elements of such growth—softening, fatty degeneration, ulceration, and discharge. In certain cases of nasal glanders at the earliest stage there is merely an increased proliferation of the mucous corpuscles, which become more granular or purulent. Soon, however, the fibro-vascular layer is involved, the affected part being the seat of dark bluish congestion, and of the proliferation of small rounded lymphoid cells, comparable to those of the early stage of tubercle, and enclosed in more or less dense fibrous areolæ. The common nasal nodule or patch has a soft velvety surface, dirty gray or grayish yellow, and the lymphoid cells are so circumscribed in nests that when soaked in water the cells are washed out and the fibrous reticulum is left hollowed out like a honeycomb. In this fibrous reticulum are many spindle-shaped and a few rounded cells. Its vascularity is easily demonstrated by injection. The centre of each nest is the palest part of the mass, and unless stained by extravasation it contrasts with the reddish areola. These islets of lymphoid cells, at first isolated and each the size of a pin's head, may enlarge and become confluent, forming the larger nodules. With this increase the centre of each becomes turbid, and the cells are found to have become granular and fatty, and to have in part broken up into a granular débris. This characterizes the period of ulceration, and erosions and ulcers follow in ratio with the extent of the neoplasm and the rapidity of its growth. If the growth is tardy, the ulcer, with irregular eroded and everted edges, may remain for some time stationary or even recede, while if rapid, new tubercles form around the margin of the first, and by the disintegration of their elements the ulcer is continuously extended. The lesions are especially common on the septum nasi and turbinated bones. Similar lesions may be found in the nasal sinuses or larynx.
The nodules found in the lungs strongly resemble miliary tubercles, but are usually less numerous. As in the nose, they have a punctiform, central, grayish, turbid portion, encircled by a more translucent ring, surrounded in its turn by a vascular area. They are also composed of the same granular rounded cells, though they may, especially in the chronic forms, have undergone caseous, fibrous, or calcareous degeneration. The acute tubercles are often surrounded by circumscribed pneumonia with considerable exudation. They are distinguished from genuine tubercle by their vascularity and by the absence of giant-cells.
The cutaneous deposits are composed of the same histological products imbedded in the dermis or in the subcutaneous connective tissue, and extending in some cases deeply between the muscles, with no clear line of demarcation from the sound tissue. Not only the chains of nodules (farcy-buds), but the connecting lymphatic trunks, are the seat of the characteristic cellular product, and in chronic cases there is the enlargement of the adjacent lymphatic glands as well. In these there is a special tendency to early disintegration and ulceration.
In the diffuse glanderous swellings (infiltrated glanders, inflammatory glanders) the affected tissues are the seat of an inflammatory process with profuse exudation throughout, while in the interstices of the connective tissue are numerous granular glander-cells. The same tendency to necrobiosis is shown as in the other forms of glanderous neoplasms, and such diffuse swellings become the seats of very extensive, deep, and irregular ulcers, or frequently of fibroid growth and induration, forming the so-called cicatricial deposits. These are hard, firm, and resistant, and histologically consist of a dense fibrous stroma interspersed with the spindle-shaped cells. They are especially common in chronic cases, and such an appearance on the nasal mucous membrane is always suspicious, as this dense fibroid appearance rarely follows a simple traumatic lesion.
Diffuse glanderous infiltrations in the nose may implicate the entire mucosa of one or both nasal chambers, and the ulcers are liable to be greater than from the nodular form of the disease. They are also especially associated with thrombosis of the veins, which occurs to a less extent in the nodular form and conduces to the dark-blue tint of the mucosa.
Glanderous infiltration of the lungs is inflammatory in its nature (pneumonia malleosa), attacking an area of two or three inches in diameter at or near the margin of the lungs, and proceeds to caseous necrobiosis, suppuration, calcification, or fibroid induration. In the skin such infiltrations also frequently terminate in induration, while ulceration and abscess tend to appear when the proliferation of glander-cells is most abundant (farcy-buds).
The glander-nodules are not uncommon in muscles, intermuscular connective tissue, spleen, liver, kidneys, and testicles. Leukæmia is also a constant feature, the irritation of the lymphatic glands manifestly stimulating the production of the lymph-cells.
DIAGNOSIS.—The diagnosis of glanders usually rests on the viscid nature of the discharge, the painless nodular swelling of the submaxillary glands and the indisposition to suppurate, the characteristic appearance of the nodules, elevations, ulcers, and indurations of the nasal mucosa, and the presence of the specific bacillus. The diagnosis of farcy rests mainly on the nature of the nodules and corded lymphatics, of the ulcers and their discharges, on the extension of the affection toward the trunk, and the tendency to implicate the respiratory organs. Usually, there are several victims, the earlier ones chronic cases, the later ones acute, or there is a history or presumption of exposure. Yet in many cases, and especially in the more chronic internal forms (laryngeal, pulmonary, etc.), the diagnosis is difficult, and inoculation of a horse, goat, sheep, or rabbit may be the only available means of reaching a decision. Auto-inoculations are unreliable, as parts not yet the seat of active disease will often resist inoculation.
PROGNOSIS.—This is always unfavorable. The constancy of internal deposits and the viability of the germ in such products render it impossible to eliminate the poison from the system in the great majority of cases. In external glanders only is there any reasonably good hope, and even this is confined to the chronic cases. In stating this much, it is not denied that recoveries even of chronic nasal glanders do occur, yet these are few, and the majority of those that do apparently recover usually succumb as soon as they are subjected to hard work or specially trying conditions of life, so that but little faith can be placed in most of the alleged recoveries.
TREATMENT.—Considering the great danger of multiplying and preserving the germs of a disease so fatal alike to man and beast, the treatment of glanders is never commendable. The danger is least in the case of chronic farcy, not only because the processes are less active, but because the virus is not being thrown out and diffused with the tidal air of respiration, sneezing, and coughing. The unbroken farcy-buds and swollen lymphatics may be actively treated by compound iodine ointment, and the ulcerous nodules freely cauterized with corrosive sublimate, biniodide of mercury, chloride of zinc, sulphate of copper, or iodized phenol. Local inflammations may demand fomentations and astringent antiseptic lotions. Meanwhile, the system must be supported by a tonic regimen and medication, abundance of pure air, a liberal and wholesome diet, and the maintenance of the various bodily functions in a healthy condition. Of medicinal agents the most pronounced tonics have the best reputation—sulphate of copper and iron, biniodide of copper, arsenic, and, above all, arsenite of strychnia. Next to these the sulphites rank, and a combination of the two last named is perhaps to be preferred.
PREVENTION.—The glandered horses and all animals attacked with acute or obstinate farcy should be destroyed and their bodies be burned or deeply buried. Every State should legally interdict the use of a glandered horse or his exposure in any public or other place where infection is likely to reach other animals by contact or through fodder, litter, stable utensils, or any other objects employed about animals. No less imperative should be the perfect disinfection of all stables, harness, and other objects with which glandered animals have come in contact. The value of such measures is sufficiently attested by what has been stated above as to the prevalence of this disease in the French army so long as the doctrines of non-contagion dominated in its management, and the comparative disappearance of the disease so soon as a change of theory and method had been inaugurated; the absence of the disease in the English army, where the doctrine of contagion and its extinction has long prevailed; and the entire absence of the disease from Australia, New Zealand, etc., into which it has never been imported, though prevailing in a corresponding latitude and climate at the Cape of Good Hope.
Glanders in Man.
Up to 1812 the communication of glanders to man failed to be recognized. Then Lorin, a French surgeon, published a case of the kind in which inflammation of the hand was induced by inoculation from a horse suffering from farcy, and Waldinger and Weith drew attention to the dangers of infection about the same time. In 1821, Muscroft in England and Schilling in Germany simultaneously reported cases of infection from the horse in which the true symptoms of glanders in man were recognized. Rust, Sedow, and Weiss soon followed with additional cases; then Forozzi (1822), Seidler (1823), Wolff, Grossheim, Eck, Brunslow, Lesser, Travers (1826), Kries, Grubb, Brown (1829), Neumann (1830), Vogeli (1831), Alexander (1832), and Elliotson (1833). Though the disease was now well recognized, yet its nature has been elucidated by a series of later writers, including especially Rayer, Tardieu, Virchow, Leisering, Gerlach, and Korányi.
ETIOLOGY.—Man is rarely infected from any other source than the horse. In a very few instances the contagion has been derived from infected men. The modes of infection, immediate and mediate, are the main points to notice in this connection. Those employed about horses are usually infected by direct contact of the poisonous discharges, blood, or tissues with abrasions on the skin or mucous membranes. The inoculation received in giving medicine, examining the nose, performing operations with effusion of blood, dressing cutaneous ulcers, slaughtering, skinning, making a necropsy, burying, etc., is not uncommon. Again, direct infection is sustained through snorting of the horse, so that particles of the virulent discharge are lodged on the mucous membrane of the eye or nose. Closely allied to this is infection by inhaling the exhalations of glandered horses, and this doubtless accounts for some few cases which have been recorded as communicated through the unbroken skin. The bite of the glandered horse is a rare means of infection. From infection by eating glandered animals man is usually saved by the cooking of his food and by his inherent power of resistance, yet with instances of this kind on record, as recorded by Ringheim, and the well-known conveyance of the disease to animals in this way, it would be folly to ignore the risk to man from eating the flesh of glandered horses, sheep, goats, and rabbits.
Among the mediate forms of contagion may be named drinking from the same pail or trough after a glandered horse, using a knife that has been employed to open a glanderous abscess, wiping a wound with an infected blanket or handkerchief, handling infected harness, wagon-pole, or manger with wounded hands, sleeping over glandered horses or in a stall or on litter previously used by such horses.
Conveyance of glanders from man to man has taken place through using or handling the same dishes, towels, or handkerchiefs, through dressing the wounds, or, as in the case of the veterinarian Gerard, through making an autopsy of a victim of the disease.
Fortunately, the susceptibility of man is slight, but few out of the multitudes handling glandered horses becoming infected. It is essentially an industrial disease, 114 cases being distributed as follows among the different occupations: hostlers, 42; farmers and horse-owners, 19; horse-butchers, 13; coachmen and drivers, 11; veterinary surgeons and students, 10; soldiers, 5; surgeons, 4; gardeners, 3; horse-dealers, 2; policemen, shepherds, blacksmiths, employés at veterinary school, and washerwomen, 1 of each.
A condition of ill-health doubtless predisposes to this as to other invasions of infectious disease, yet men in apparently the most vigorous health have succumbed to the poison.
SYMPTOMS.—The incubation of acute glanders in inoculated cases usually varies from one to four days. In cases in which the mode of entrance is not so manifest it may apparently extend over one, two, or even three weeks. If the disease has occurred by external inoculation, the seat of the wound shows the first symptoms, consisting of tense swelling, pain, and a dark or yellowish erysipelatoid redness, while the edges of the wound are puffy and everted, the matter escaping is sanious, and the surrounding lymphatics are swollen and red and the lymphatic glands enlarged and tender. After a few days constitutional disorder sets in—languor, extreme weakness and prostration, aching in the limbs (muscles and joints) and in the head, rigors alternating with fever or a continued fever after the first violent chill, and in some cases nausea, vomiting, and even diarrhoea. In cases not resulting from external inoculation the febrile symptoms are the earliest to be noticed, and the muscular and articular pains may be at first mistaken for acute rheumatism. In other cases, in which the gastric and intestinal disorders are the most prominent and the prostration and weariness extreme, the symptoms at first strongly suggest typhoid fever. Soon, however, with a sense of formication a local yellowish or livid erysipelatoid inflammation appears, by preference on the softer parts of the face, the nose, eyelids, cheeks, or on one of the principal joints, the shoulder, elbow, or knee. In the midst of the phlegmonous swelling, or even antecedent to it, there appear small firm red spots or nodules, sometimes as small as those of variola, at others like a pea or as large as a walnut or larger. These gradually blanch in the centre, soften, and change into pustules or abscesses, and, bursting, discharge a slimy, thick, sanguineous pus, often emitting a mawkish or fetid odor. The sores thus formed are ulcerous and unhealthy, with puffy, ragged, everted borders and a grayish or yellowish red base, which often extends deeply between the muscles and exposes tendons and bones. When several deposits of this kind are closely aggregated, they tend to combine in one slough, which may involve a great extent of tissue. In all cases there are the swollen, reddened, tender condition of the connecting lymphatics and the tumefaction of the lymphatic glands. At times the deposits and abscesses are deeply seated in the interstices of the muscles, and at other times the joints are enlarged by exudation.
In nearly one-half of the cases glanders supervenes on the cutaneous symptoms. At first a viscid, whitish nasal catarrh appears from one or both nostrils, mixed with striæ of blood; then upon the pituitary membrane appear ulcers like those already described in the horse; the same form on the buccal, pharyngeal, and laryngeal mucous membranes, and by physical examination they may even be found to have invaded the lungs. The margins of the nostrils become adherent through the drying of the tenacious mucus; the meati are blocked or narrowed by the swelling of the mucosa, the detachment of sloughs, and the accumulation of the discharges; the breathing becomes snuffling and difficult; the voice altered or lost; the cough weak, with a mucous and bloody expectoration, and the breath offensively fetid. The submaxillary lymphatic glands are inflamed and enlarged, and may even go on to suppuration and ulceration. The conjunctiva is usually involved, and at times the specific formation and ulceration extend to the stomach and intestines, and nausea, vomiting, indigestion, irregularity of the bowels, and fetid diarrhoea ensue. There is complete anorexia, but thirst is ardent, especially with diarrhoea. With the advance of the disease dyspnoea supervenes, and nervous disorder is shown by the extreme weakness, anxiety, sleeplessness, troubled dreams, nocturnal delirium, dilated pupils, and even coma. The temperature, though at first unaltered, may later rise to 104° F., and the pulse to 110 to 120 beats per minute. The diagnosis is confirmed by detection of the bacillus in the discharges, and, above all, in the liquids of freshly-opened pustules (Wassilieff).
The duration of acute glanders in man may be no more than three days, though usually it is protracted to fourteen or twenty-one, and exceptionally to twenty-nine days. The almost constant termination of this form of the disease is in death.
Chronic glanders occasionally appears in man, and is in most respects the counterpart of that of the horse. The morbid process shows itself in the integumental or other tissues of the body, and only attacks the nose and air-passages later, when the constitutional symptoms become more intense. The general malaise, languor, prostration, aching of limbs and joints, and inappetence are usually present, complicated by a local swelling in the seat of inoculation (face, hands, etc.), with small nodules progressing to pustules, congestion of the lymphatics, and swelling of the lymphatic glands. These lesions may subside even before suppuration, and the disease is manifested for a week or two only by a general feeling of weariness and ill-health; but sooner or later the local symptoms reappear in the same or another seat, and the neoplasms, though indolent for an indefinite length of time, finally degenerate, soften, burst, and form ulcers. These ulcers have the general characters already described—a livid grayish or yellowish hue, with red, puffy, irregular edges, and a viscid greenish, yellowish, dirty white, or bloody discharge. They tend to increase, or they may appear to heal by the peculiar firm cicatricial formation, but on the swollen margins new deposits, abscesses, and ulcers tend continually to form. Sometimes these are of considerable size and seated deeply among the muscles, but when opened they show the same unhealthy serous or bloody pus, and manifest a tendency to extension rather than to healing. When the disease extends to the respiratory organs, often two or three months after the onset, there is cough and sore throat, blocking of the nose by the tenacious discharges and swollen mucosa, and in the pharynx, fauces, and nose the characteristic ulcer may be detected. The attendant constitutional symptoms are also much more marked—indigestion, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, rigors, profuse perspiration, high temperature, excited breathing and pulse, a yellowish or earthy hue of the skin, rapid emaciation, and great prostration. Though great emaciation, debility, and hectic ensue on the indolent chronic processes, yet the disease usually assumes all the characters of the acute type before terminating fatally.
In cases that recover the fever diminishes, exacerbations cease, ulcers granulate and cicatrize, vesicles dry up, the nodules and enlarged glands diminish, the erysipelatoid swellings of skin and nose subside, and a very tardy and imperfect convalescence is established.
The duration of chronic glanders, nasal or cutaneous (farcy), is exceedingly indefinite, varying from three months to ten or eleven years. One of the most protracted cases is that recorded by Bollinger of a veterinarian who, after an eleven years' illness, recovered with cicatricial contraction of the nose and larynx and a decided cachectic appearance.
MORBID ANATOMY.—Besides the lesions above mentioned as occurring in the skin and mucous membranes of the nose, mouth, and pharynx, the frontal sinuses, the larynx, and less frequently the lungs, are the seats of the specific glanderous processes. In the lungs there are then the nodules, hard, caseous, or purulent according to their age, and varying in size from a millet-seed and pea upward to the involving of the greater part of a lobe. Beneath the pleuræ may be seen ecchymoses, hard, fibrous nodules, and yellow elevations, which on being incised furnish grumous pus. The spleen is usually enlarged, gorged with blood, gray or black, and is the seat of suppuration. The liver is enlarged, softened, and may be the seat of glanderous processes, with ulcers in the bile-duct or gall-bladder. The joints, like other serous cavities, become the seat of specific suppuration. The bones are often implicated in adjacent deposits, especially in the face, cranium, and hands, so that the compact tissue may become reduced to the merest shell, while the medulla and periosteum abound in the specific products. The cerebral meninges and brain-tissue are frequently the seat of specific growths and minute abscesses. It is noticeable that the enlargement of the lymphatic glands is usually less than it is in the horse, though they are never entirely free from lesions. Indeed, the tendency in man to the formation of considerable glanderous neoplasms is much less than in the solipede.
The microscopy of the lesions is essentially the same as in the horse. O. Wyss describes the cutaneous nodules as formed by a great proliferation of round cells (like pus-cells) in the upper layer of the corium just beneath the papillary layer. In a more advanced stage the corium and papillæ are filled with pus-cells, and, becoming disorganized, give rise to the formation of pustules and small abscesses. Lagrange describes in a chronic ulcer of the palm, a layer about 2 mm. in thickness of embryonic cells closely packed with an amorphous intercellular substance. The nuclei appeared larger than in ordinary ulcers or tubercles. Extending into this layer were capillary vessels packed with red globules and with blind extremities, or in some instances minute ruptures and hemorrhages. Beneath this superficial cellular layer was a stratum of striated muscle, especially noticeable for the excess of condensed connective tissue making up the intermuscular septa, and the great multiplication of nuclei with large, clearly-defined nucleoli, not only inside the sarcolemma, but also between the fibrillæ and separating them widely. At some points the muscular tissue had undergone a vitreous degeneration, while at others were many fusiform cells. At one point, where the ulcer extended to the phalanx, the compact layer of the bone was attenuated to the thinnest shell and perforated, so that the medulla was continuous with the ulcer. The medulla contained a great number of white globules, medulla-cells, and minute embryonic nuclei. The vessels were remarkable by the extensive fibroid thickening of their coats. On section of the ulcer many orifices stood widely open because of the rigidity of their walls. The internal coat was plicated, as if too large for the lumen. The external fibrous layers were at points abundantly interspersed with, and even replaced by, groups of embryonic cells, the active proliferation of which meant the destruction of the perivascular fibrous layer. These embryonic cells even invaded the lumen of the vessel and partly blocked it, so that the remnant of the tube remained as the centre of a disintegrating mass, or later a caseous or purulent focus.
DIAGNOSIS.—Acute glanders, when well developed, is unmistakable. The presence on or near the skin of the characteristic nodules, pustules, phlyctenæ, and ulcers, the oedema or erysipelatoid condition of the adjacent skin, the redness of the lymphatics, the presence of the neoplasms and ulcers in the nose, and the sticky, fetid, variously colored nasal discharge, with the acute fever, prostration, and pains in the limbs and joints, make a tout ensemble that is pathognomonic. In the initial stage only it may be confounded with rheumatism, but the arthritic pains are not usually attended by the same amount of redness and swelling of the joints, the prostration is far more profound, and there are in most cases an irritable, unhealthy-looking wound and a history of exposure to infection from glandered horses.
In chronic glanders, and especially in the external form (farcy), the diagnosis is often more difficult. From pyæmia and septicæmia it is usually to be distinguished by the comparative absence or the slightness of the chills, by the less healthy character of the pus, and by the implication of the nasal mucosa, the larynx, and lungs. When the nose, larynx, or lungs are but slightly affected, there may be a strong resemblance to syphilis or miliary tuberculosis, but a close attention to the character of the lesions, the absence of any concomitant history or symptoms of syphilis, and deductions drawn from the occupation of the patient and the presumptive exposure, will greatly assist in reaching a diagnosis.
The detection of the bacillus is not conclusive, as in tuberculosis and some forms of septicæmia there are similar organisms, agreeing with the microbe of glanders even in the matter of size. In cases of doubt a little delay will usually allow the development of new and more characteristic symptoms.
The final resort, however, is to inoculation. Auto-inoculation, as practised by Poland, is rarely satisfactory, as the system has acquired a partial tolerance of the disease and local lesions are not so certainly developed as in the healthy subject (St. Cyr). Inoculation on a healthy goat, sheep, or rabbit can always be availed of, and if practised on more than one subject can be relied upon, as the virus loses nothing of its power in passing through the human system, but usually determines an acute form of the disease in the animal inoculated.
PROGNOSIS.—Acute glanders is almost constantly fatal to man. Of chronic cases, and especially the external form (farcy), from one-third to one-half of the subjects recover. When both internal and external (farcy—glanders), the issue is usually fatal. Kütner claims that cases caused by external inoculation are more favorable than those caused by the inhaled poison. This accords with the general principle, that a poison viable in the comparatively vitiated air of the lungs or on the surface of the intestinal canal is better fitted by its habit of life for survival in the blood and plasma, and is consequently more redoubtable. The greater the duration of the disease in any particular case, the more favorable is the prognosis.
TREATMENT.—In the treatment of glanders in man the same principles must guide as in animals. In external, inoculated cases the wounded tissues should be early destroyed by potent caustics—fuming nitric acid, corrosive sublimate, iodized phenol, chlorine, sulphate of copper, carbolic acid, or the hot iron. The erysipelatoid swellings may be treated by leeching, followed by solutions of carbolic acid, iodine, or chlorine-water, by ice, and internally by laxatives and iodide of potassium. The first two antiseptics may be freely used by hypodermic injection. Abscesses and tumors should be laid open and cauterized as above, and then treated by weaker solutions of the same agents. Nasal ulcers may be treated by insufflation of iodoform and injections of creasote, carbolic acid, nitrate of silver, or permanganate of potash solutions. Of the greatest importance is a general tonic and stimulating regimen. A nutritious diet (including beef-tea), abundance of pure air, alcoholic stimulants, quinia, tincture of the chloride of iron, and, above all, arseniate of strychnia, have been used with advantage. Various anti-ferments, such as the bisulphites in full doses, carbolic acid, and iodide of potassium, have apparently proved beneficial, and deserve a further trial. As in the horse, a great variety of other agents, mostly of a tonic nature, have been employed, but with very variable results.
PREVENTION.—The first step toward the prevention of glanders in man is the systematic restriction and extinction of the affection in animals. This has been already sufficiently referred to above. Further measures of prophylaxis embrace the following: the avoidance of contact with glandered and suspected horses by all persons having any wounds, abrasions, or ulcers on their skins; the cauterization with nitrate of silver of all such sores on persons necessarily brought in contact with glandered or suspected animals or their products; the general diffusion of information as to the danger from glandered animals; washing of hands and face in a solution of carbolic acid or chloride of lime after handling infected or suspected animals or their carcases or products; the thorough disinfection or destruction (preferably by fire) of harness, clothing, racks, mangers, wagon-poles, buckets, troughs, brushes, combs, litter, and fodder that have been exposed to infection; and, finally, the exclusion from the markets of all meat derived from suspected or infected animals. It is generally held that the flesh of the horse alone demands inspection, but with the known susceptibility of sheep, goats, and rabbits it can easily be conceived how the infection may reach man through his food, though horse-flesh is never consumed. That glanders has never been recognized as arising from the consumption of diseased sheep or rabbits does not prove that it has never reached man by this channel, any more than the absence of all recognition of the infection of man from the horse would prove the non-occurrence of such infection until the beginning of the present century. The knowledge that the animals used for food in this country are liable to contract and convey this disease is an additional reason for the systematic and universal suppression of the disease among the equine population.