Abscess of the pancreas or spleen is even less definite in symptoms. These may terminate in rupture and peritonitis, or the splenic abscess may become chronic and indolent and in a measure harmless.

Perirenal Abscess is betrayed by specially sensitive loins, stiffness and groaning in rising or in turning sharply on himself, drooping of the back under a load, and by albuminous urine. In a small animal the part may be reached and the tenderness ellicited by handling.

Cutaneous Symptoms in Strangles. Though by no means a common form, strangles sometimes attacks the skin, more particularly that of the face, head and neck, appearing in the form of pustules or small abscesses, or it may be of a rounded nodular elevation, which may disappear without forming either vesicle or pustule. The points of election are around the lips, nose and eyes, upon the mucosa inside the lips, along the line of the facial lymphatics running toward the submaxillary gland, and at points where there is special friction, as under the halter, collar, saddle, crupper, in the hollow of the heel, under the tail, on the perineum, in the groin and axilla. They may extend more or less up the limbs, or around the point of primary attack attended by more or less engorgement. When this engorgement has reached extensive dimensions and is mixed with sanguineous extravasation it is considered as having merged into petechial fever.

Symptoms of Coital Infection. From four to seven days after copulation there appear fever, dullness, stiffness, anorexia, swelling and heat of the lips of the vulva, a yellowish opaque discharge from its lower commissure, a deep dark red blush of the mucosa, with points of distinct infiltration and thickening, developing into vesicles and pustules. The perineum, the groin and mammæ often show an extension of the congestion and eruption. In exceptional cases deep abscesses form and Letard records a fatal case with extensive suppuration among the muscles of the hind limbs and the haunch, inside the pelvis and along the line of the aorta.

Symptoms of Nervous Lesions. The lesions of the brain and spinal cord are usually secondary and often appear when the less dangerous superficial manifestations, are tardy and indolent, when the exudates are indurated and indisposed to soften. There may be violent delirium, pushing of the head against the wall, movements of the limbs as if walking or trotting, roaring, plunging, striking with fore or hind feet, trismus or other muscular spasms. More frequently there is great dulness, prostration, debility, vertigo, drowsiness, amaurosis, paraplegia, general paralysis, coma. If the lesion is in the spinal cord the spastic or paralytic symptoms are likely to be confined to the hind parts.

Fulminant or Septicæmic Form. Bigoteau describes a rapidly fatal, septicæmic form, with sudden onset, anorexia, extreme prostration, uncertain stumbling gait, a deep blue color and ecchymosis of the visible mucosæ, violent heart action, pulse weak and small, hurried breathing (45 per minute) temperature 102° to 106° F., often inability to rise and death from asphyxia in from two to five days.

Diagnosis. In mild and regular cases this is easy. The attack in rapid succession of all the young, and still susceptible horses in a stable or locality, and the uniform coincidence of a profuse nasal catarrh, and the formation between the branches of the lower jaw, of a diffuse, hot, painful swelling rapidly advancing to suppuration and discharge are virtually conclusive. Simple catarrhs even if infective and attacking all young horses do not cause phlegmon of the submaxillary lymph glands as occurs in the great majority of cases of strangles. Glanders which is attended by both nasal discharge and submaxillary swelling, is slower in its onset, usually with little or no fever, has usually a more adhesive discharge, ragged, unhealthy ulcers on the nasal mucosa with a disposition to extend, often it shows cord-like thickening of the lymphatics on the side of the face, and the submaxillary swelling is smaller, made up of a number of small, hard, insensible rounded nodules which show virtually no tendency to suppurate. (See diagnosis of glanders). In cases of doubt it may be advisable to inoculate a Guinea-pig and a white mouse. The Guinea-pig resists a small dose, while the mouse forms abscess in the seat of inoculation in the dependent lymph glands. The Guinea-pig is very susceptible to glanders, and the white mouse immune. Or mallein may be used.

Prognosis. The mild type of strangles almost invariably terminates favorably. In the irregular types with internal abscess the prospect is grave in ratio with the size and multiplicity of the foci and the vital importance of the organ invaded. In 15,421 cases collected by Friedberger and Fröhner, and representing the total in a series of outbreaks, but 3 per cent proved fatal. Much, however, depends on the special potency of the germ. Horses contracting this in a particular year or from a given stable in the same year convey the disease to others in a malignant form, while others that contracted it in another year or a different stable infect with the mild form only.

Prevention. In the older countries horsemen too often accept strangles as inevitable. They expect that all horses will have it sooner or later, and it is not worth while to guard against it. The too absolute doctrine of the identity of the germ with the microbe of erysipelas, puerperal fever, contagious pneumonia, influenza, of the suppurations of the limbs and feet in sheep and cattle, and other streptococcic infections seems to corroborate this view. But on the other hand the absence of strangles from given countries like Iceland where erysipelas and its coadjutors are common, its absence from secluded breeding farms and districts in America, though prevailing all around them, the rapidity of its spread when introduced in a sick colt, and the entire failure to extend in the same way from an erysipelatous man to susceptible young horses with which he comes in contact show that preventive measures may be successfully applied for its restriction and extinction. The conceded family resemblance of the microbes and the experimental production, by their inoculation, of lesions showing many points of similitude leave them still sufficiently distinct in their pathogenesis to warrant measures for the suppression of the variety which produces strangles.

Precautions for the private owner. During the existence of strangles in the district, exclude strange horses, asses or mules from the farm or stable. Keep young susceptible horses from public stables or yards (livery, feeding, training, fair, market, and above all, dealers’ and sale stables) and even from public drinking troughs and buckets used in common. Provide against their contact with manure from strange or infected stables, or with pastures, fields and wagons on which this has been put, also against the use around the stable or on fodder of forks or other implements that have been used for such manure. Avoid hay or other fodder or litter from a strange barn or one that is open to any suspicion of infection. Avoid running water that has drained land, stables, or yards where strange horses have been, or those open to suspicion. In shipping by car or other public conveyance disinfect the latter before the animal is loaded. If a second hand wagon, shafts, pole, harness, blanket or other object is brought on the place or used, disinfect the same before using.