Symptoms. Equine influenza is liable to show a special predilection for a given set of organs in different epizoötics, so that we find descriptions of the different forms as independent types or even separate diseases: as the catarrhal form, thoracic form, abdominal form, bilious form, nervous form, pink eye, infectious cellulitis, and rheumatic influenza. These forms may, however, appear in different subjects in the same epizoötic, and when they are not due to complications, may be looked on as a concentration of the morbid processes on one class of organs rather than another.
Initial pathognomonic symptoms. Certain prominent and striking symptoms are so constantly present in the earlier part of the disease that they may be held as virtually diagnostic. These are the suddenness of attack, the anorexia, the profound early prostration and weakness, the high temperature, the swelling and watering of the eyes, and the specially brownish red coloration of the conjunctiva and other visible mucosæ. The attack may come on with almost lightning rapidity. The animal which yesterday, or it may be but an hour or two ago, appeared to be in the most vigorous health and spirits, is found with pendant head, resting perhaps on the manger, ears drooping, eyelids swollen and half closed, epiphora, conjunctiva of a brownish red or violet, lips loose and drooping, and one or two legs partially flexed, while the body is balanced on the others. The patient is indisposed to move, and when compelled to walk may sway and stagger from nervous and muscular weakness. The arched back, cracking limbs, and their stiff, rigid movement further indicate the suffering in muscles or joints or both. Appetite is greatly impaired or lost, thirst marked, and hyperthermia 102° to 105° or upward. Sneezing, cough or symptoms of some other special localization may be present, but the above occurring in a number of horses at once, without appreciable climatic cause, when one or two new horses have been very recently acquired, or when influenza has been prevailing in the vicinity or in a neighboring place, will usually stamp the nature of the attack.
Cadeac considers the sudden attack, high fever, and profound nervous prostration and stupor as the manifestations of the uncomplicated disease, while the localizations in the lungs, bronchia, pleura, liver, bowels, etc., are indications of complications by germs of other diseases, which find the debilitated influenza system especially open to attack. The fever which always sets in early may be little above the normal in mild cases, and may reach 107° or 108° F. in the more severe ones. It may last thus for five or six days and then rather suddenly descend to near the normal. In other cases it descends a little daily, the lowest temperature for the day being seen in the morning. Shivering is often nonexistent or passes unperceived.
The pulse does not usually encrease in ratio with the temperature. It may be at first only 40 or 50 per minute, though later, and especially with extensive disease of important organs, it may reach 60, 70, 80 or even 100. It usually lacks in firmness and force, even when the heart beats forcibly, being soft, somewhat compressible, and often irregular in successive beats, the weakest corresponding to the last part of the inspiratory act, or when the lungs are full and the heart compressed. The heart impulse behind the left elbow is usually forcible and may show variation in rhythm or even intermissions.
Mild catarrhal symptoms of the nose and throat are usually present, the discharge being at first serous and later muco-purulent. As a rule this is complicated with more or less bronchitis, but this does not indicate anything serious. Acceleration of the breathing, sneezing, and cough are present. Cough may be at first nervous, husky and paroxysmal, but later as the discharge is established it assumes a looser, mucous character. It is liable to be roused by excitement, by drinking cold water, by inhalation of dust, or by giving medicine. In connection with these symptoms there are some indications that the digestive organs are involved. The pharyngeal and submaxillary glands may be swollen and tender. If the subject has been seized just after a full meal, there may be slight tympany, and in any case, the fæces are passed in small balls, a few at a time, hard and with a baked or glistening surface. These may have an unusually strong or heavy odor, and laxatives are liable to act with dangerous energy. The urine is scanty and high colored, sometimes icteric.
In such mild attacks, which constitute the majority, improvement may be noted as early as the fourth day, and a prompt recovery follows.
With extensive thoracic lesions, the symptoms are much more severe and the danger greatly enhanced. These may occur in any patient, but there appears to be a special predisposition in the young and still very susceptible animals, in those crowded together in close, badly aired buildings, in the overworked, poorly fed or in any way debilitated subject, and in horses that have been especially excited and exposed, as by railway travel.
In exceptional cases congestion of the lungs may be so acute as to lead to speedy death, and the objective symptoms do not differ greatly from those of ordinary cases of this condition, if we except the very high temperature in influenza, associated as it is with the fact of the epizoötic prevalence of the disease.
In pneumonic cases the lesions are usually double and have a tendency to develop toward the lower borders of the lungs, just behind the elbow or farther back, and less frequently in the centre of the organ. It may be impossible to detect crepitation, but sounds of distant organs (heart beats, bronchial blowing, intestinal rumbling) are heard with unwonted clearness over the consolidated parts. A mucous râle can usually be detected behind the shoulder blade, along the line of the larger bronchia. Percussion sounds may be indefinite, as the area of consolidated lung is usually small in ratio with the hyperthermia. The area of flatness in ordinary fibrinous pneumonia is usually much greater with a high fever, and if the lesions are on one side only, right or left, it is still more suggestive. The crepitation too in pneumonia is significant. When the pulmonary lesions are extensive by reason of œdema, a marked infiltration may often be noted on the lower surface of the trunk or in the limbs as well.
Pleuritic symptoms may show in the same connection. The breathing becomes more hurried and shorter, friction sound may be heard but it is very transient and soon superseded by an absolute flatness on percussion, rising to a definite horizontal line, representing the boundary of the effusion in the lower third or half of the chest, and usually rising to the same height on both sides. Tenderness of the intercostal spaces may or may not be present. As the disease advances creaking sounds may be heard from the stretching of the consolidated false membranes. The combination of double pleuro-pneumonia constitutes a very fatal type of the disease.