On auscultation the signs met with during the first stage become much more marked. Inspiration is always rough, rasping, painful and difficult at certain points, particularly in the anterior zones. In this region expiration is rough, prolonged and sometimes of a clearly marked blowing character. This is particularly the case in the subscapular zone and the auscultation zones 2 and 3 (Fig. 166). In the dorsal region and in zone No. 1, respiration may appear normal. Nevertheless, the sounds are propagated to a distance, the infiltrated lung steadily loses its elastic qualities, the vesicular murmur entirely disappears from the affected regions, and the sounds noted are of bronchial origin.
Like the first, the second phase may vary in intensity, extent, and in the diffusion or localisation of the tuberculous lesions. Blowing respiration may be noted over different areas, accompanied by sibilant, snoring and migratory mucous râles. The vesicular murmur is exaggerated in the healthy parts, coughing, accompanied by expectoration or followed by swallowing movements, is frequent, the appetite becomes capricious, and the general condition suffers. In this second phase almost the whole of one lung may be diseased and exhibit the signs described.
The third phase corresponds to the softening of the tuberculous masses, and the formation of ulcers and caverns. The zones of dulness or partial dulness may be more extensive, though cavern formation is usually confined to the anterior or middle lobes. Percussion still affords no precise information.
As the tuberculous masses undergo softening and ulceration, their contents are gradually passed into the bronchi, and auscultation reveals signs indicative of the existence of caverns, which signs vary with the dimensions of the caverns themselves. On auscultation the respiration is always found to have at certain points a blowing character, and it may even develop into a true tubal souffle. In other areas, where the caverns are merely in course of formation, gurgling sounds are all that are heard, but where true caverns exist there is an incessant cavernous souffle.
The lesions peculiar to the third phase are seldom seen in practice; because the animals become anæmic, exhausted and cachectic, they are usually slaughtered early. Nevertheless, the third stage occasionally develops in an astonishingly short time, six to eight months at most.
Very frequently the patients, although cachectic and even phthisical, do not yield on auscultation the sounds described as peculiar to the third stage, because the tendency to softening is not very marked in bovine animals. The lungs exhibit massive infiltration, and, whilst pulmonary consumption is not uncommon, the development of caverns is comparatively rare.
The expectoration or discharge in this third form is puriform, glairy, viscous, and of a dirty-yellow or even greenish-yellow colour. Bacteriological examination reveals the presence of tubercle bacilli and adventitious organisms.
These conditions are always associated with various complications, and the second and third stages of chronic tuberculosis are frequently accompanied by lesions of the pleura, of the mediastinal lymphatic glands, of the liver, etc.
Digestive disturbances often occur; the appetite is capricious or in abeyance, there is atony of the rumen and chronic dyspeptic tympanites. These disturbances are easily understood where there are lesions of the liver, intestine, and mesenteric lymphatic glands, but not when the lung alone appears the seat of the disease. In this condition the patients probably suffer from permanent complex intoxication, due to toxins elaborated by the tubercle bacillus and other microbes which multiply on or in the lesions, and this chronic intoxication reacts on the vital functions (innervation, secretion, digestion and nutrition). Nor are the effects limited to these appearances; the heart’s action is also accelerated, and the temperature rises. During the first and part of the second phase there is comparatively little fever, but afterwards this is continuous or of a peculiar intermittent character. In the morning the patient’s temperature may be normal; in the evening it has risen from 1·5 to as much as 9° Fahr. (1·1 to 5·2° C.) above normal, and this recurs day by day. These attacks coincide with softening of the lesions, and when suppurating caverns exist they are more marked and more nearly continuous, assuming the characters of the hectic fever shown in consumption.
Often during the febrile periods the urine is albuminous.