Ulcerative endocarditis with coagula on the valves is not uncommon. The spleen is often the seat of small abscesses in the centre of solid exudates, with in many cases softening and enlargement of the organ. The blood tends to retain its normal bright red color, and clots firmly, contrary to the usual condition in septicæmia.
Symptoms. The formation of emboli and secondary abscess is usually marked by a violent rigor, lasting from a few minutes to an hour and which may be repeated at irregular intervals, serving, in some measure, to distinguish pyæmia from septicæmia. The temperature rises with the rigor, (102° to 105°) but shows marked remissions especially in the morning, when it may not exceed the normal, and rising again with the recurrence of chill or staring coat. The pulse is usually encreased in frequency even during the remissions and is soft and compressible. Remissions may be attended by profuse perspirations or even, in the advanced stages, by fœtid diarrhœa. The breath has a peculiar sweetish or mawkish odor. Blood passed with the fæces may indicate intestinal abscess, and albumen or pus in the acid urine, bespeaks suppurating foci in the kidney. The cloudy mucus from the pelvis of the kidney in the horse must not be mistaken for this. Cough or dyspnœa will indicate abscess of the lungs, and intercostal tenderness, pleurisy.
The buccal mucosa may be dry and cracked, and the tongue coated. From the first the animal is dull, and prostrate, and the visible mucosæ become dusky brown or even yellowish from the liberated hæmatin. Blood abstracted, will show the microörganism, an excess of leucocytes and diminution of the red globules. The poison determines hæmolysis. A cardiac murmur, usually with the first sound, betrays endocarditis. This is especially characteristic of chronic pyæmia. Again multiple suppurating arthritis may appear. Stupor, coma or paralysis will indicate cerebral or meningeal lesions.
In pyæmia following trauma there is drying up of the pus which becomes serous or bloody, a puffy condition of the granulations, and the evidence of a thrombus in one or more veins leading out from the wound.
In other cases the occurrence of pyæmic symptoms, consequent on parturition, metritis, omphalitis, bone-abscess or osteomyelitis, on suppurating internal inflammations, ulcerative endocarditis, or infective fevers like strangles, influenza, contagious pneumonia, cattle plague, distemper, rouget, hog cholera, etc., serves to identify the disease.
The prognosis of pyæmia is always grave, and death may be expected in six to fourteen days in acute cases. Chronic forms last much longer.
Prevention is the great object in regard to surgical cases, and this means the prevention of suppuration in the wound. As far as possible, however, this is to be sought by asepsis, or the use of weak non-caustic antiseptics only, as cauterized tissues form favorable culture media, when the action of the antiseptic is spent, there being no longer any living and resistant leucocytes present. The early excision of veins, the seat of thrombosis, has proven successful.
In purely medical cases, the seat of the primary suppuration is not always obvious and one is thrown back on medical treatment which is rarely satisfactory in severe cases.
Treatment. When accessible even the secondary abscesses may be opened, washed out with a weak antiseptic (3 per cent. carbolic acid solution), and covered with antiseptic dressing. Antipyretics are worse than useless, because of the resulting depression of the vital powers, and the reduction of the natural powers of resistance. Calomel in small and repeated doses tends to assist in elimination, and to counteract complications through sepsis of the contents of the bowels. Quinine and chloride of iron continued in large doses have been especially relied on as antiseptic tonics. Liberal feeding, if the appetite will admit, is all important, to tide the patient over the period of depression. In the chronic cases tepid bathing is of great value (Senn). Senn has great confidence in the stimulating and supporting action of alcoholic liquors—beer, ale, porter and even whisky, and in human beings accustomed to the daily use of these beverages they are more imperative than in the lower animals.
Septicæmia. The micro-organisms causing septicæmia are the same as those of pyæmia, but they differ somewhat in activity, and act upon a system with a modified susceptibility, and above all one void of lesions in the internal membrane of the vascular system. The symptoms can be developed by the introduction of the ptomaines and toxins alone, which hypothetical condition has been named septic-intoxication. In case of excessive doses of septic material, death occurs so early as to indicate simple narcosis. If, as is usually the case, the microbes also gain access to the blood and multiply there, the condition has been known as septic infection. In any prolonged case of septicæmia, the tendency is to the formation of suppurating foci (septico-pyæmia), so that the two affections may be looked upon as probably the same, with modifications of the earlier phenomena.