Another characteristic of the strangles swelling is its steady, and usually speedy, advance to suppuration and abscess. It becomes hard, tense, and resistant, then, in the centre, or at various points of the surface, small areas of circumscribed softening can be detected, and soon show distinct fluctuation. Two or more of these may coalesce or they may form several distinct abscesses, which may early point, burst and discharge, when the remainder of the exudate softens and degenerates into pus, and the cavity closes by granulation. In some cases after the formation of the swelling it disappears by resolution, the exudate becoming liquefied and absorbed. In glanders the nodular, insensible, swelling tends to persist without extensive pasty exudation or suppuration.

Cases of strangles catarrh in which the submaxillary lesions are omitted, are quite common. These occur during the regular strangles epizoötic, and protect against a second attack.

Symptoms of Pharyngeal and Laryngeal Strangles. Extension of the morbid process from nose to pharynx is exceedingly common. When concentrated on the pharynx there are extension of the head forward with elevation of the nose, swelling of the throat laterally or downward, uneasy movements of the jaws, salivation, difficulty of swallowing, return of ingested liquids through the nose, gulping, and a loose suffocative cough. The swelling of the throat tends to attain to large dimensions, and may threaten suffocation by interfering with the breathing. This is still further aggravated if the laryngeal mucosa is the seat of exudate. The breathing may become loud and stertorous, the mucosæ of a dark leaden hue and the animal dull and stupid from the venous condition of the circulating blood.

Abscesses forming on the lateral parts of the throat usually make their way to the surface though this may be below the level of the parotid. If from the parotidean lymph gland, one of the ducts may be opened thus forming a salivary fistula. If from the retro- (supra-) pharyngeal glands the rupture into the pharynx is more likely to take place, but in some cases the investing sac, meeting with equal resistance in all directions, fails to undergo degeneration and softening at any one particular point, and the contents remain pent up indefinitely. If the liquid is absorbed a cheesy or putty like mass may be the final outcome, with chronic cough, some stertor in breathing and it may be difficulty in swallowing.

If the guttural pouches should be involved, there is deafness, parotidean swelling, which may eventuate in a fluctuating swelling at the lower border of the parotid, and a free discharge when the head is lowered, which is likely to last after general recovery. (See Guttural Pouches, pus in).

Laryngeal paralysis and roaring often follow laryngitis in strangles.

Pulmonary Symptoms in Strangles. Tracheitis and bronchitis are forms of extension of strangles from the upper air passages, and pneumonia follows of virtual necessity. In many cases these are primarily dependent on the descent into the lungs of the infecting discharges, complicated in many cases by the inhalation of food materials. There are the usual symptoms of broncho-pneumonia complicating those of strangles and the percussion and auscultation signs usually imply circumscribed areas of congestion and consolidation with intervening areas of pervious lung. There may be at such points the blowing or mucous râles of bronchitis, the sibilant sounds of emphysema, the crepitation of congestion and the abnormal clearness of sounds carried from distant organs through the consolidated lung. On percussion there may be the non-resonance of the consolidated areas, and the excess of resonance over emphysematous portions or open gas-filled vomicæ. In these last cases there may be an amphoric sound on auscultation and a crack-pot sound on percussion. These pulmonary lesions are often fatal, or the recovery is slow on account of a succession of lobular congestions and abscesses.

Abdominal Symptoms in Strangles. The abdominal lesions in strangles are usually secondary, the infection reaching the part through the blood, or by the lymphatics from a castration or other wound, or from infection by coitus. The phlegmon and abscess may be in the mucosa, especially in the agminated or solitary glands, in the adjacent lymph glands at the connection with the mesentery and in those of the mesentery itself. The animal is dull, listless, with dry, staring coat, tympany and slight colicy pains after eating, costiveness, retracted, tender abdomen, insensible loins, and groaning when rising, when walking down a steep incline, or turning in a very narrow circle. These symptoms following an apparent or partial recovery from strangles are significant, and rectal examination may detect a hard, tender mass connected with the bowel or mesentery.

If rupture takes place into the peritoneum there is general infective inflammation of that structure with sudden access of fever, marked prostration and an early death. In more favorable cases its adhesion to the bowel or to the abdominal wall opens the way for rupture into the gut or externally and there may be a slow healing of the cavity by granulation. It may be a month or two before such an abscess opens and for a length of time thereafter the health is poor, and the animal lacking in condition and endurance.

When the abscess is formed in the liver there is high fever with shivering fits, irregularity of the bowels (bound up or loose), dusky or yellowish hue of the visible mucosæ, anorexia, followed by peritoneal infection or pyæmia (secondary abscesses).