It is held that the danger lies largely in the inoculation of very young pigs, and Nocard advises to operate only on those of four months and upward.
The danger of spreading the germ by inoculation may be the more easily guarded against, considering that it is very destructible by disinfectant agents (heat, dryness, cold, chloride of lime, quick lime), and that it does not readily survive in a locality, where it cannot find a constant succession of victims. Yet the practice ought to be confined to herds exposed to infection, and under special precautions, as regards the exposure of other herds.
The technique of the Pasteurian inoculation is to inject, subcutem, on the inside of the thigh, 0.1cc. of the weaker preparation (premier vaccin), and twelve days after a similar dose of the stronger one (deuxieme vaccin).
This produces a mild attack of the disease from which the great majority recover, and though they still react somewhat to a second and third inoculation yet the disease so produced is rarely fatal.
CHOLERA SUIS; HOG CHOLERA.
Definition, Synonyms, History, Losses. Bacillus choleræ suis, 1.2–2μ., ærobic, biology, table of germs; accessory causes, roaming pigs, railways, car litter and manure, boats, trucks, loading banks, chutes, runways, stockyards, pens, fairs, watershed, butchers, dealers, etc., wagons, dogs, birds, vermin, insects, offal of abattoirs, butcher’s and kitchen scraps, unburied carcasses of dead hogs, convalescent and immune hogs, susceptibility, parasites and infection atria, putrid food, infection from ground carried into feeding trough by snout and feet, large herds, rapid carriage of swine for long distances. Lesions: hæmorrhagic spots and petechiæ on skin, mucosæ and serosæ, circumscribed capillary congestions, congestion of spleen, lymph glands, stomach, intestines, necrotic processes. Button-like ulcers on intestinal mucosæ. Incubation, 6 to 14 days. Symptoms: fulminant cases. Acute Cases: dulness, anorexia, recumbency on belly, weakness, paresis behind, thirst, tenderness of skin and abdomen, hyperthermia, easily blown, blush on skin, dark red spots and patches, enlarged inguinal glands, cutaneous exudate—greasy or drying black, bowels costive, later pultaceous and finally diarrhœaic, petechiæ on mucosæ, emaciation. Chronic Cases: symptoms more slight, but great loss of condition. Diagnosis: from swine erysipelas, swine plague, Widal test, table of differential symptoms. Prevention: expense of extinction prevents effective measures; removal of accessory causes, comfort, air, light, food, salt, powdered soaps, mouldy bread, cotton seed, space, green food, precautions against introduction of bacillus, special shipping provisions for fat hogs, exclusion of stock hogs from infected localities, precautions by purchasers. Immunization, Disinfection. Certificates. Extinction in herds and districts. Treatment: chronic cases, food, antiseptic medication, antithermics stimulants, tonics. Serum therapy, method, merits, demerits.
Definition. A contagious bacteridian disease of swine, acute or subacute, and characterized by hyperthermia and other febrile disorders,—congestion, exudation, ecchymosis and necrotic ulceration of the intestinal mucosa and of that of the stomach and of other parts,—by a profuse foul, liquid diarrhœa, by enlargement of the lymph glands with congestion and blood extravasation,—by effaceable blotches, and petechiæ (ineffaceable) of the skin, snout and visible mucosæ, with a tendency to necrotic changes—less frequently by pulmonary congestions, and degeneration,—and by a high mortality.
Synonyms. The earlier designations were mostly drawn from the red or black discoloration of the skin and mucosæ and applied indiscriminately to the other forms of hæmorrhagic septicæmia which we now differentiate as erysipelas (rouget, Rothlauf) and swine plague. They included measles, erysipelas, scarlatina, red soldier, purples, blue sickness, carbuncular fever, etc. Others basing their nomenclature on the prominent intestinal lesions, etc., designated it typhoid fever, pig typhoid, typhus, carbuncular gastro-enteritis, pneumo-enteritis, and diphtheria. Even in Europe while the pig erysipelas (rouget, Rothlauf) is now recognized as a distinct disease there is no clear distinction made between hog cholera and swine plague. In England we find these more or less confounded under the names of swine fever, swine plague and hog cholera, and on the continent of Europe under those of schweineseuche and schweinepest, or pneumo-enteritis infectieuses. Differences in different epizoötics or outbreaks are recognized, and the field is left open for the future identification of different forms of this common group of swine fevers, but the existence of constant bacteriological distinctions are not always insisted on, as we do in the United States in the case of the two great leading types swine plague and hog cholera.
History. Definite history of this disease may be said to begin with the discovery and demonstration of the actively motile hog cholera bacillus by the U. S. Bureau of Animal Industry in 1885. Yet in the history of animal plagues, even in early times, deadly epizoötics are described which undoubtedly represented one or other of the contagious affections of modern times. Among the more definite may be named a destructive gastro-enteritis (magen seuche) in Germany in 1817, a pleuro-pneumonia in France and Bavaria in 1821, a cholera with blotching of the skin (morbus niger) in Ireland, and an erysipelas in pigs in France and Switzerland in 1836, and in Ohio in 1833, there was a fatal affection afterward recognized as hog cholera. Writers conjecture that it was imported into America from Europe in improved pigs, and from one European country to another in the same way, but we have no absolute proof of times and shipments and their immediate effects, so that these theories are but more or less reasonable deductions from the familiar extensions of the disease in more recent cases. Under the great commercial activity of the latter half of the 19th century, the active movements of animals by canal, steamboat and rail, and the massing together in one market of many animals drawn from widely different sources, hog cholera has made extraordinary extensions on both sides of the Atlantic, until Friedberger and Fröhner pronounce the schweineseuche and schweinepest the most widely disseminated and dangerous of swine epizoötics, and Dr. Salmon estimates the losses in the United States at $10,000,000 to $25,000,000, per annum.
Bacteriology. Prior to 1885 bacteria had been found in the different outbreaks of contagious fevers in swine, and the bacillus of swine erysipelas had been demonstrated in 1882, but it was only two years later (1884) that the motile bacillus choleræ suis was first described by Klein, and in 1885 that Salmon and Smith demonstrated it as the essential cause of the disease, together with its biological and cultural peculiarities.