The peritoneum is congested, petechiated, thickened, and more or less covered with thin false membranes, and it contains from a pint to three quarts of a sero-sanguinolent liquid which coagulates loosely on exposure. The liver is congested, with points of blood extravasation, and zones of degeneration (fibroid, fatty or necrotic), and sometimes abscess. The congestion extends to the spleen and pancreas. The abomasum and intestines are the seat of mucous gastro-enteritis. The mucous folds of the pyloric sac of the stomach are congested, reddened and petechiated, the small intestine has tracts and patches of congestion, thickening and softening, Peyers’ patches and the solitary glands are enlarged, and ulcers may be present on large or small intestines.
Effusion is usually found in the pleura, clear, grayish or bloody, with flocculi and false membranes, and further branching redness of the serosa. The mediastinum may be thickened by exudate especially around the glands, œsophagus and blood vessels. The lung shows lobular, interlobular and peribronchial exudates approaching at times to the appearances shown in lung plague, along with the atelectasis, emphysema and, in prolonged cases, caseation.
Less constant are congestions and petechiæ of the pericardium, heart, kidneys, vesical mucosa, testicles, ovaries or womb. The blood is dark and forms a loose coagulum. In case of abortion the umbilical cord is infiltrated and the placental membranes ecchymotic. The brain and spinal cord and their membranes are sometimes congested and infiltrated and a serous effusion exists in the arachnoid.
The bacterium is found more or less abundantly in each of the morbid lesions.
Prevention. Absolute seclusion of the sick and of all their products is the prime essential. The general distribution of the lesions throughout the body and the uniform presence of the bacterium in the lesions indicate that no part of the body and no secretion can be considered as free from infection. All parts of the body, all expectoration, saliva, fæces, urine, milk even must be withheld from all other animals, at least until they have been thoroughly cooked or disinfected. Manure must be burned, or buried deeply in quicklime. Contaminated pens, yards, wallows, streams and fields must be abandoned or thoroughly disinfected.
Galtier found that the virus remained active for six days in putrefying organic matter at 39° to 75° F.; in 25 days in water, at room temperature; the refuse litter, fodder, manure, and drainage matter from the infected place must be carefully guarded against. The virus steadily loses in force in such media, but remains infecting to animals injected with it. The most active disinfectants may be used on the pens and yards (copperas 5%, sulphuric acid 2% solution, or mercuric chloride .2%) while the contaminated fields should be abandoned for the season. All droppings may be treated with sulphuric acid (2%), creolin, lysol, phenic acid or copper sulphate. The susceptibility of practically all the animals of the farm, demands the exclusion of these, while that of rodents, renders necessary the further exclusion of wild mammals; and we may add birds, wild and tame, and if possible flies. The plowing of the contaminated soil will do much to obviate danger, yet the sheep folds and pastures should be separated by a considerable distance from any place where infected animals and objects have been. If drinking troughs for sound animals have been used by the sick or suspected they should be emptied and washed with a disinfectant (sulphuric acid 2:100).
ULCERATIVE (ERYSIPELATOID) INFECTION OF THE LIMBS IN CATTLE AND SHEEP.
New York outbreaks. Causes: wounds by sharp pebbles, streptococci, pure cultures, inoculations. Symptoms: swelling on lower limbs, abscesses, implicating tendons, bones, joints, and under hoof. Prevention: avoid septic or frosted mud, irritants, etc., disinfect surface, keep dry and clean, open abscesses, use disinfectants, separate infected.
This affection was seen in several herds in Oneida Co., N. Y., in the Spring of 1897. The geological formation of the region was a calcareous rock with a surface soil thickly impregnated with pebbles and small flat shaly masses. Sheep suffered in Western New York.
Causes. In Oneida, the subjects were dairy cows, which in the early spring, when the frost went out of the ground, had to wade through chilly soft mud reaching to the knees or above, and mixed with small stones with sharp edges, and with semiliquid manurial products. The abrasions made by these stones furnished convenient infection atria for septic microbes in the manure. In the pus obtained from the ulcers were found in abundance the bacillus coli commune, and a long streptococcus representing on an average from 20 to 40 cocci in a chain. Dr. Moore made pure cultures of these and produced the same symptoms in a cow by injecting the streptococcus subcutaneously in the back of the pastern, and in another animal by simply abrading the surface and rubbing on the streptococcus culture. As the inflammation, suppuration, and resulting ulcers implicated not only the skin but also the subcutaneous connective tissue, the affection had many of the characters of erysipelas.