In mice intraabdominal injection of .01cc. killed in 48 hours, and subcutaneous injections in 2 to 5 days. The lesions were like those seen in birds, and streptococci were abundant.

In dogs after intravenous injection there was hyperthermia (103.6° and 104.1° F.) and lameness of the right fore shoulder joint, followed in 5 to 8 days by recovery. Feeding on the viscera of the diseased chickens, was followed by anorexia, and vomiting only.

Guinea pigs and sheep proved refractory.

Immunization. The injection into the wing vein of .5 to 2.5cc. of bouillon culture, sterilized by heat proved protective to the chickens against inoculations of the virus while the check animals invariably died.

TUBERCULOSIS.

Synonyms. Definition: infectious disease caused by bacillus, attended by productive inflammation, tubercles, necrotic degeneration, caseation, fibroid change, calcification or ulceration. Animals susceptible: python, salamander, carp, fish, birds, rodents, sheep, goats, solipeds, cattle, dogs, cats, apes, swine, wild ruminants, kangaroo, carnivora, cage birds, civilized (housed) man. Geographical distribution: with dense population, Central Europe, Britain, Eastern States; little in absence of cattle products—Scottish Western Isles, Iceland, Newfoundland, Greenland Highlands, Arctic North America, Northern Norway, Sweden, Lapland: open air life protects. Virulence: ancient records, modern, early antituberculous legislation, decimation of herds, researches of Vilemin, Gerlach, Chauveau, Semmer, Parrot, Tappeiner, etc. Bacillus tuberculosis: evolutionary changes, relation to actinomyces, 1.5 to 3.5μ by 0.2μ shorter and thicker in ox, solitary, exceptionally short chains, on blood serum may be filamentous, staining slow, carbolated fuchsin, technique, sections; biology, adaptation to environment, to genera, variation in same genus, experiments showing real identity of variant forms; vitality: in water human bacillus 50 to 70 days, bovine bacillus indefinitely, avian 117 days, dried sputa 9 months, cow’s lung 102 days, putrid material 43 days to years, survives gastric juice, sunlight kills in some hours, if in thin layer, day light 7 to 18 days, dry heat (212° F.) for an hour left living bacilli, moist heat 140° F. for 1 hour kills, low temperatures (−25° F.) fail, after 15 days in salt failed in rabbit, after 30 in Guinea pig. Chemical disinfectants. Accessory causes: racial vulnerability, close buildings, dark, foul, damp stables, poor scanty food, heavy milking, conformation, early breeding, inbreeding, age, predisposing diseases, traffic in animals, dairy extension, admission of tuberculous animals from other states, assorting tuberculous for sale in a given State, sale of sound from tuberculous herd, lack of indemnity for animals killed, private testing of herds and sale of tuberculous, accustoming to tuberculin test, antipyretics during tuberculin test, false certificates of tuberculin tests, feeding hogs on tuberculous offal, feeding calves and hogs on tuberculous milk, feeding hogs after tuberculous cattle, feeding from a common trough, dry, dusty stables, extension through vermin, flies and other insects carry virus. The tubercle: miliary, pinhead, conglomerate, proliferation of cells—tissue and leucocytes, in nests in stroma, giant cells in center, then epithelioid, then lymphoid, caseation, calcification, fibrosis, pearl disease. Localization: Cattle: pulmonary: miliary tuberculosis, aggregation into larger tubercles, caseated centres, fibroid, cretified, abscesses, vomicæ, complex infections, infiltrations, difference from broncho-pneumonia, lesions of different ages; pleural lesions; congestion, exudation, fringes, nodules, grapes, adhesions, caseations: bronchial and mediastinal glands, congestion, swelling, softening, induration, caseation, cretefaction: cardiac lesions: lesions of mouth and throat, pharyngeal glands: gastro-intestinal, peritoneal, mesenteric glandular; œsophagastoma; liver tubercle; splenic; pancreatic; genito-urinary; mammary; cerebral; spinal; orbital; skeletal; cutaneous; muscular; glandular; table of distribution. Swine: lesions: pharyngeal, intestinal, mesenteric, muscular, hepatic, splenic, glandular, pulmonary, skeletal, caseation, liquefaction. Horse: lesions: thoracic, abdominal, glandular, of serosæ, vertebræ, etc. Sheep and goat: lesions: thoracic, abdominal, glandular, hepatic, pharyngeal, facial, etc., verminous affections. Dog and Cat: lesions: respiratory, abdominal, pharyngeal, tonsillar, hepatic, pancreatic, splenic, skeletal, arthritic, cutaneous. Apes and Menagerie Animals: lesions. Chickens: lesions: intestines, liver, spleen, peritoneum: lungs and kidneys often escape. Pheasant: lesions: as in hens, centre zone has epithelioid cells, fibroid, cretefaction, amyloid degeneration. Parrot: lesions: eye, beak, tongue, palate, larynx, bones, joints, lungs, liver, intestines, muscles, skin. Primary and secondary infection, extension by lymphatics, blood channels, tonsils, inhalation, deglutition.

Synonyms. Consumption; Tabes; Scrofula; Pining; Grapes; Great White Plague, etc.

Definition. An infectious disease common to man and a large number of animals, caused by the bacillus tuberculosis, and characterized by a productive inflammation giving rise to small, rounded bodies (tubercles), or diffuse infiltration, with a tendency to necrotic degeneration, and caseation, or to fibroid degeneration (sclerosis), calcification or ulceration.

Animals susceptible. Tuberculosis comes near to being a panzoötic, since although reptiles, fishes, birds and some mammals do not readily contract it under normal conditions, yet under abnormal and debilitating conditions nearly all will succumb to it.

Reptiles. Sutton found tuberculosis in a python which was kept so warm in the London Zoological Gardens that a thermometer between its folds registered 85° F. Kráhl, Battaillon and Ferre cultivated the bacillus in frogs, Kráhl in snakes. Blauvelt found tuberculosis in a salamander. Lechner found it in amphibia.