Pathogenesis. Inoculated subcutem, in a Guinea pig caused death in 24 hours, with a necrotic œdematous condition of the adjacent tissues like malignant œdema, and containing the microbe. It was further found in the liver, spleen, abdominal exudate, heart, blood and lungs, but not in the kidneys.

It proved harmless to rabbits when injected subcutem, but fatal in 24 hours when thrown into the peritoneum. The lesions were severe duodenitis and omental inflammation, and the bacterium was found in the liver and duodenal wall.

Pigeons, rats and mice proved refractory to the artificial cultures, also chickens. The latter were injected subcutem, intraabdominally and intravenously. Yet in view of the constancy of the lesion in hens with the microbe in pure cultures and the absence of all other morbid conditions, Dawson felt justified in attributing the disease to this microörganism. It is possible that his experimental hens had become immune from a previous attack, or failed in some condition of food or environment which is essential to pathogenesis, or finally there may possibly be some other infinitesimal microbe present which escaped observation, but which furnished the occasion for the coincident development of the colon bacterium.

Treatment. The indications are: the expulsion of the offending bacterium to be followed by nutritious, easily digested food, pure water and tonics. Dawson advises castor oil in dose of two teaspoonfuls, or calomel ¼ grain repeated till purgation occurs; and to be followed by powdered fennel, anise, coriander, cinchona of each 30 grains; powdered gentian and ginger of each ½ dram; powdered copperas 15 grains. The addition of bismuth, pepsin, or orexin may be suggested.

APOPLECTIFORM SEPTICÆMIA IN CHICKENS.

Streptococcic infection in hens. Most violent in pullets and hens; less so in capons and cockerels. Found dead, or sick 24 hours, ruffled, prostrate, neck limp, head drooped, indisposed or unable to rise, liquid icteric fæces, blood-stained skin of neck and breast, death without agony. Lesions: Soiled anal feathers, plump carcass, skin pallor save neck and breast, extravasation of blood subcutem and intramuscular, mucosæ anæmic, peritoneal engorgement and effusion, enlarged, engorged liver, cell proliferation, degeneration, coagulation necrosis, gall bladder full. Enlarged congested spleen, degeneration. Congested swollen kidneys, epithelial degeneration, casts, streptococcus. Congested, consolidated bronchioles, alveoli, lungs, with microbe. Meningeal congestion, exudate. Bacteriology: Streptococcus, pure cultures in lesions, size, chains, tetrads, staining qualities, culture media, colonies, action on sugars, acid, no gas, on milk no coagulation, on gelatine no liquefaction. History: Stagnant water; no evident source of infection, buzzards, etc. Pathogenesis: Inoculation, intravenous or intramuscular, feeding. On duck, pigeon, rabbits, mice, dogs. Guinea pigs and sheep immune. Immunization by injection of sterilized cultures.

Under this name Norgaard describes a hæmorrhagic streptococcic infection which prevailed in 1901 in a flock of 200 to 250 Plymouth Rocks in Loudon County, Va. Forty birds died within six weeks, and later the mortality reached 200, death often occurring suddenly while feeding, or the birds would drop from their roosts in the night and be found dead in the morning.

Symptoms. In the majority, the pullets which died suddenly, no symptoms whatever were observed, yet a certain number of the capons and cockerels were noticeably ill for 12 to 24 hours. In these the feathers were ruffled, the prostration extreme, the head drooped between the wings, the neck was weak and wobbling (limber neck), the wings and tail drooped, and the animal lay on its breast often unable to rise. Sometimes there was a passage per anum of liquid bile-stained mucus. Close examination of the neck and breast might detect hæmorrhagic discoloration of the skin, though the skin elsewhere was pale and smooth. Death takes place without a struggle.

Lesions. The anal feathers were usually stained, indicating diarrhœa; the picked carcass was plump and fat, with pale, healthy looking skin, except on the neck and breast, where it was discolored by extravasated blood; at such points the connective tissue and muscles were infiltrated with blood in areas of an inch in diameter, more or less, and with irregular outlines. The buccal mucosa was clear, pale and bloodless. The cavity of the body contained an abundance of sero-sanguinolent exudate, and the mesenteric veins were engorged. The liver was greatly enlarged and congested, the greater part of its substance being apparently composed of the distended blood vessels. The hepatic cells were granular and fatty, and if death had been delayed over twenty-four hours their outline became indistinct and the nucleus stained only faintly. In the foci of disease were clumps of round cells and leucocytes in and between the acini, and in still more tardy cases points of coagulation necrosis. The streptococcus was abundant in the necrotic centres, among the clumps of leucocytes, in the parenchyma and capillaries. The gall bladder was usually distended with bile. The spleen had the large size and well developed Malpighian bodies that characterize the well-fed bird, but it showed still greater enlargement, combined with sanguineous congestion and circumscribed blood extravasations. With a hand lens were seen numerous round, semi-transparent points, the size of pin holes, which the microscope revealed to be centres of coagulation necrosis, surrounded by embryonic tissue. The centres consisted of a granular debris with abundance of the streptococcus. The kidneys were congested and swollen, and in cases that had survived two or three days there was granular degeneration of the epithelium of the tubules, and the lumen of the tubes contained casts with leucocytes and streptococci. The organism was also present in the capillaries. The lungs presented areas of congestion and consolidation, exudation into the walls of the bronchioles and the alveoli, and an abundance of streptococci in the lesions. In the cranium were a subdural exudate and meningeal congestion. For examination of the tissues they were hardened in specimens of alcohol of encreasing strengths, embedded in paraffin and stained with carbol fuchsin with a counterstain of methylene blue.

Bacteriology. The streptococcus was found in pure cultures in all the diseased centres except in the intestinal contents. Smear preparations were made from the blood, the abdominal exudate, the intestinal contents, the bone marrow, the cerebral exudate and the sanguineous effusions into the muscles.