From the leg irruption found in animals feeding on distiller’s swill and grains, or on the mast of beet sugar factories, by the history of the outbreak, of the dietary, of the seat and nature of the disease, and by the escape of animals living on a different aliment.
From the false cowpox (varicella) it is distinguished by the unilocular lesion of the latter, its absence of areola, and its rapid pustulation and drying, in five or six days into a thin papery crust instead of a thick, firm, umbilicated scab, as in cowpox. Varicella is further liable to appear in successive crops and thus last for several weeks.
The streptococcus eruption on teats and udder, is marked by the formation of abscesses of various sizes from a simple pustule upward, by the unilocular condition of the pus sac, by its tendency to invade the deeper tissues, and by its rupture and granulation without the formation of the thick umbilicated scab of cowpox.
The hard warty growths on the teats which last for weeks or months should never be mistaken for cowpox.
Cowpox usually lasts for some weeks in a herd, the duration depending on the number of susceptible animals and, whether these are habitually milked by the same person.
Course. Prognosis. It is a mild affection, which does not endanger life, yet it causes considerable loss through diminution of the milk secretion and, it may be, altered character of the milk, through the persistent sores and ulcers of the teats, through inflammation of the mammæ, and through an acquired habit of kicking.
Treatment is rarely needed. Any costiveness should be corrected by a cooling saline laxative (½ to 1 lb. Epsom salts) or by soft food, and milking should be done with great care to prevent rupture of the vesicles and the formation of sores. A teat tube may be used if necessary. Sores may be dressed with bland ointment. An ounce each of spermacetti and sweet almond oil with half a dram of gum myrrh. Or the vesicles or sores may be washed after each milking with a solution of 2 drams hyposulphite of soda in 1 quart water.
SHEEPPOX. VARIOLA OVINA.
Synonyms. Pocks; Peltrot; Clavelee, Picotte, (Fr.).
Definition. An acute febrile affection, eminently contagious, prevailing epizoötically in sheep and goats, characterized by early and marked hyperthermia, and general constitutional disorder, followed by the appearance on the bare or merely hairy portions of the skin, of diffuse redness becoming intensified in points, a rounded papular eruption, passing into vesicles, pustules and scabs, which latter dry up and drop off in 15 to 20 days.