12. In old, emaciated animals and in second or third tests, Pearson uses twice the usual dose of tuberculin or more.
Tuberculosis Reaction. With slight variations different operators make their estimate of tuberculosis reaction on nearly the same general basis. A rise of 2° F. over the highest temperature of the day or days before, in the absence of any other appreciable cause, and provided that the elevation has followed the tuberculosis type of gradual rise and fall, is held to condemn. If, however, this rise does not exceed the normal average, if the temperature before injection did not exceed 100° and that after injection 102°, the case may well be held in doubt and reserved for re-testing. If, on the contrary, the initial temperature of the animal was 103°, and there was, between the 8th and 16th hours, a gradual typical rise and fall, reaching 104° or a little over, in the absence of any other cause for this, the subject would be condemned. Cattle having an initial temperature of 103° or above are not favorable subjects for the test, except in the case of calves in which the temperature is normally higher and the reaction must reach a higher point. In all cases of doubt it is well to hold for a second test, unless urgent sanitary considerations demand that a herd should be freed from the infection in short order. Then it may be better to risk a single error, with the concurrence of the owner, than to leave a possible centre of infection in the herd.
Local swelling in the seat of injection may be charged to lack of antiseptic care, or the presence of septic germs in the system of the animal prior to injection.
A chill during the period of reaction is not uncommon, especially in cold weather, or in a draught of cold air. The coat may stare along the spine in patches, or generally, tremors may be seen on the body or limbs, and a clammy coldness invades the ears and horns, and especially the points of the hocks and ischia. The back is sometimes arched and the feet drawn together somewhat.
In the absence of any source of excitement the head may be less elevated, the ears lopped forward or drawn back, and even the eyelids may droop somewhat. These phenomena may last for a few minutes or for an hour or two.
In testing other genera consideration must be had of the different normal temperature (horse 99.5°, dog 98.5°, sheep or pig 103°, bird 106°), and the varying susceptibility to tuberculin, the Guinea pig requiring a maximum dose relatively to its size and man or horse a minimum.
Effect of Tuberculin Test on the Later Average Health of the Animal Reacting. The transient fever and reaction on the day after injection modifies the milk secretion temporarily to a certain extent in ratio with the hyperthermia. The consensus of veterinarians of the largest experience, and the voice of the International Veterinary Congress at Berne in 1895, oppose the doctrine of any continuous effect on the health even of the tuberculous. Yet in the case of Governor Morton’s large herd of Guernseys a careful record of temperatures showed that for weeks after the test the reacting animals presented oscillations which were not shown before, and which were not found to occur in the sound animals. In the activities of sanitary work such indications are easily missed.
Effect of Tuberculin Test on Sound Animals. In 1894 I tested this on a number of thoroughbred Jersey and grade cows, injecting them six times at intervals of from five to fourteen days. It led to no appreciable change of the general health as shown by the temperature, breathing, pulse, yield of milk or its quality. Careful analysis was made of the milk at each milking, and in two animals soundness was attested by post mortem examination. Similar tests made by the Bureau of Animal Industry and others led to the same results. Cows in which the yield of milk was on the gain continued to encrease in the same ratio as those that had not been injected, and those in which it was on the wane showed no more rapid decrease. The butter fats and total solids showed no variation more than appeared in the healthy.
Action of Tuberculin on Parturient Cows. The testimony of Bang, Eber and Pearson, based on a very extensive experience, would indicate that the tuberculin test is not forbidden by the parturient condition. Eber concludes that unless the initial temperature materially exceeds 39.5° C. (103° F.) the parturient state is no barrier to successful testing. My own experience, on the contrary, is that a considerable proportion of parturient cows give a reaction when the initial temperature did not exceed 103° F., and when no sign of tuberculosis could be found. As an example, a cow in high condition, with an initial temperature of 102.8° F., rose gradually from the eleventh hour after injection and reached 106.3° by the eighteenth, a rise of 3.5°. From the record she was not due to calve for three months, but a fortnight later, when already killed and laid open, she showed all the signs of parturition, a fully matured calf, and not a trace of tubercle. This is far from unusual, and I am convinced that many errors will be avoided by refusing to condemn parturient animals or those within a couple of weeks before or after parturition on the tuberculin test alone.
Reliability of the Tuberculin Test. Even in the most careful hands the tuberculin test cannot be held to be infallible. A certain very small proportion of cows react without the recognition of any tubercle post mortem, some because of other bodily conditions, like parturition or abortion, but in skilled hands these may be ignored in ordinary sanitary work. Pearson claims to have had but 8 such cases in 4400 cows that gave a typical reaction. He suspects that some of these even had undiscovered tubercle, and Nocard thinks that all such cases are to be explained in this way. On the other hand a very few really tuberculous animals fail to react, some in connection with advanced disease, some because of repeated previous testing, and some because of the introduction of antipyretic agents into the system, but such cases can either be detected and controlled or are so infinitesimal in numbers, that they can be safely ignored in sanitary work. In skilled hands, the tuberculin test will show at least ⁹⁄₁₀ths of all cases of tuberculosis, when other methods of diagnosis will not detect ⅒th. See above case of herd where objective symptoms showed nothing, yet tuberculin condemned half the mature cattle, and post mortem confirmed this, the skeptical veterinarian being judge.