In chronic cases the anæmia is prominent. The clot is soft, relatively small, elastic and black, the serum is relatively very abundant and pale. The red globules are greatly reduced in numbers, and there are a number of giant cells which stain deeply as in chlorosis. The lymph glands are usually enlarged, softened and slightly congested but rarely the seat of blood extravasation. The tissues generally are pallid, soft and shrunken. There is a marked absence of subcutaneous and intermuscular fat, while the connective tissue is more or less infiltrated with a transparent, watery lymph. The serous cavities usually contain more than the normal amount of fluid, transparent or straw-colored, and with few globules or granules. Congestions and even shreds of false membrane are sometimes present on the serosa. In some cases the lungs and bronchia are the seat of inflammatory exudates, causing nodular consolidations of from one-half to one inch in diameter. Not unfrequently the lungs show strongylosis as the fourth stomach shows strongylus contortus, the small intestines strongylus filicollis, tæniae (expansa, fimbriata, etc.), the large intestines æsophagostoma Columbiana, and tricocephalus affinis, and the gall ducts distoma hepaticum and distoma lanceolatum. In these chronic cases the spleen is usually shrunken, and the liver firm, sometimes even cirrhotic.
Mortality. The acute cases are usually fatal. Those that assume a chronic form, if free from local lesions in important organs, well-fed, and, above all, kept in the open air, and changed to a different pasture, tend largely to recovery.
Prevention. The propagation of the infection from animal to animal is slow and somewhat uncertain, and when introduced by the purchase of a new ram or other animal, it may take a considerable time to affect the stock extensively, but for this reason, and because an apparently sound sheep may harbor the germ, it is difficult to oppose it successfully by segregation. All the same, it is desirable to take all possible precautions against its advent, and among these, the exclusion of strange sheep from noninfected pastures and flocks. When the time comes to make an outcross from the home strain, the ram must be selected not only for his pedigree and individual qualities, but no less for the soundness of the flock from which he is taken. If the lambs of that flock have been decimated by disease, the best blue blood, and most faultless form should not tempt the flockmaster. He should be rejected in favor of one taken from a flock that is above suspicion. It matters little if it can be plausibly argued that the mortality came from worms of the lungs, liver, or digestive organs; these in themselves may soon ruin any flock, but they, too, often coexist with the microbe of infectious septicæmia, and, when this is the case, they prepare the system and open a way for its invasion.
New purchases should not only be selected from apparently sound and guaranteed stock, but they should be passed through an antiseptic dip on arrival, and then if possible quarantined in a special enclosure until they shall have proved their freedom from infection. A valuable ram may be placed with some lambs or yearlings in close quarters to ascertain whether he has brought the infecting matter with him. If all escape after some months the presumption is that he is sound. Perfect cleanliness of the fold should be maintained, and disinfectants may be freely used in it.
The water supplies should be watched, rejecting streams that have drained sheep-pastures where there have been marked losses of lambs and ewes. Water from deep wells without any surface leakage is to be preferred.
When new stock (ram, ewes, lambs) are of necessity mixed with the sound herd, a wide range, an open air life, and abundant dietary must be secured. The system that is full of strength and vigor can better resist the microbe and even throw it off entirely, whereas the weak, confined subject succumbs. For the same reason, the weak, emaciated and debilitated subjects should be at once separated from the sound flock, and kept in a special enclosure, in the open air, on a rich diet. Should they harbor worms, this seclusion is even more imperative. (See parasites of lungs, liver, stomach and bowels).
Lignieres advocates immunization by serum prepared on the Pasteur method, but, as he has not divulged the exact technique of its preparation, it is impossible as yet, to give this an unqualified endorsement. It has this in its favor that the mature sheep, in full vigor of middle life, though in an infected area, usually resist the infection, while the young, old, debilitated and verminous suffer. Opposed to it are these considerations that are recognized by Lignieres himself;—1st, The acquired immunity is not perfect, as shown by occasional relapses in sheep that have survived a first attack; 2d, The serum inoculation is not only useless, but dangerous in animals that already harbor the germ; I may, add 3d, Any acquired parasitism or debilitating disease may tend to break down the immunity and prostrate the system under the infection. Lignieres advises that the serum treatment should be restricted to the new born lambs in infected herds, or herds in infected areas. The first three or four weeks after birth are to be preferred for the operation, though failing this it may still be ventured on, up to a few days before weaning. The longer it is delayed the greater the danger of a preëxisting infection, and of untoward results from the new access of infecting material, on the back of an infection which varies so extremely in its pathogenic potency. Even among the new born lambs, Lignieres would restrict the serum therapy to the strong, robust and healthy, and, if they survive the resulting fever, would repeat the treatment after the hyperthermia has ceased. No satisfactory treatment of the disease has been made. An open air life, a generous diet, and a course of iron, and bitters will, however, be of use in serving to improve health, digestion and vigor, to solicit a better production of red globules, and to enable the patient to survive the period of anæmia, prostration and debility. Antiseptics like quinia, the sulphites and the iodides might be used as adjuncts.
PNEUMO-ENTERITIS IN SHEEP: HÆMORRHAGIC SEPTICÆMIA: SWINE PLAGUE.
Historic note. Microbiology: ovoid bacterium, motile, with polar stain, non-liquefying, chains, grows freely on culture media. Pathogenic to sheep, goats, dogs, hens, rodents, calf, ass. Views of Lignieres, Lienaux, and Conte. Symptoms: Acute form in young; hyperthermia, rapid pulse, troubled breathing, dulness, prostration, sopor, anorexia, congested petechiated mucosæ, offensive diarrhœa, emaciation, wheezing, cough, râles, crepitus, percussion flatness, abortion. Death in 6 hours to 3 days. Subacute form in mature: symptoms moderate, recoveries the rule. Lesions: fœtid carcass, blood staining of skin and organs, exudates, petechiæ, swollen congested lymph glands, peritoneal exudate, congested liver and spleen, gastro-enteritis, pleural effusion, lobular and peribronchial exudates, caseation, congested womb, placenta and brain, bacterium in lesions. Prevention: isolation, disinfection, secretions, manure, drainage, exclude tame and wild animals. Disinfectants.
Among the different forms of hæmorrhagic septicæmia in sheep, that observed by Galtier in 1889 in Basses Alpes, and later elsewhere in southern and western France and in Algiers, must be specially noted. It seems to be the same affection studied later by Lienaux, Conte, Besnoit and Cuillé and which prevailed from Tarn in the south of France, to Vendée in the west, and Somme in the north.