SYMPTOMATOLOGY.—Three forms of rabies in the dog are recognized—the furious, the paralytic, and the lethargic. The prodromata are, however, the same in all, so that these may be conveniently considered before the different types are noticed.

The premonitory symptoms are by far the most important, as if these are recognized the dog may be safely secluded or destroyed before there is any disposition to bite. Any sudden change in a dog's habits or instincts is ground for suspicion. Bouley well says that a sick dog is always to be suspected. In some cases there is unusual dulness and apathy, in others great restlessness, watchfulness, and nervousness. A morbid appetite, in house-dogs a tendency to pick up and swallow straws, thread, paper, pins, and other objects, or to devour their own dung and urine, is highly characteristic. A desire to lick cold smooth objects, as a stone, a boot, a piece of metal, or the nose of another dog, is often seen. Smelling and licking the anus or generative organs of another dog and the exhibition of sexual desire are frequent manifestations. An increased fondness for the owner, shown by fawning and licking, is occasionally seen, though more commonly there is a change from a formerly amiable temper to a morose, sullen, retiring, and resentful disposition. If a naturally quiet dog flies into a violent passion at the sight of another dog or a cat, and attempts to bite it, he should be carefully watched. If a social dog seeks seclusion and darkness, or if while crouching and shrinking from a blow (hyperæsthesia) he yet bears it without howl or whine, he is to be strongly suspected. Barking without object, constant moving, searching, and scraping, a disposition to tear wood, clothing, etc. to pieces, and, above all, an absence from home for a day or two, should beget grave apprehensions. The rabid bark or howl which is often heard early in the disease is hoarse, low, and muffled, partaking of the nature of both bark and howl, the first running into the second, and consists of one loud howl followed by three or four others progressively diminished in force and uttered without closing the mouth. Some rub the chaps with the forepaws as if to dislodge an offending body from the mouth; others reject bloody matter by vomiting; and others turn the head and eyes as if following imaginary objects, and snap at them. Finally, a tendency to bite, rub, or gnaw the wound is significant, and usually draws attention to the fact that the wound, long healed, is still red, sensitive, and swollen, or even papular. The conjunctivæ are usually congested, there is an increased nasal defluxion, and the skin of the forehead and over the eyes is drawn into wrinkles. This stage lasts from a half to two or three days.

Following one or more of the above symptoms, paroxysms of wicked fury come on, alternating still with periods of quiet, in which prodromata only are observed. The red congested eyes assume a fixed stare, often squint or roll as if following an imaginary object, at which the dog presently snaps. A paroxysm is ushered in by increasing uneasiness, frequent change of position, and a desire to escape, shown in rushing at the door, tugging at the chain, or gnawing the post and walls of the kennel. The tendency to bite and gnaw is further shown by seizing the straw or tearing to pieces wooden and other articles within reach, or even by the victim lacerating its own body.

The rabid howl becomes more frequent, and the rage and disposition to bite strange animals and persons merge into a mischievous desire to worry all that come in the way, the respect for former companions and friends being steadily lost as the paroxysm increases in violence. Yet for a considerable time the voice of a loved master recalls the suffering animal to some degree of self-control. If free to escape during such paroxysms, the dog expends his excitement in wandering, making long journeys of five, ten, or twenty miles, and flying at every animal or man he meets, especially if they increase his excitement by any noise or outcry. If the victim escapes destruction during one of these wanderings, he returns during a lucid interval exceedingly dangerous, for, though he may recognize or even fawn upon his friends, yet the demon of mischief is even more potent within him, and may be roused to sudden violence by any noise or excitement. The intervals of quiet are attended by a prostration proportionate to the violence of the previous paroxysm, and the animal usually seeks seclusion and darkness, where he may lie dull and torpid, but he may be roused at any time to a renewed paroxysm by any noise, disturbance, the presentation of a stick, or, above all, by the approach of another animal. During the paroxysm the animal is manifestly the subject of acute delirium, has hallucinations, snatches and bites at unreal objects, turns on his best friends, even his master, seizes and holds on to a stick or iron bar until the teeth are detached and the gums lacerated, bites his own body, even amputating tail, testicles, or toes with his teeth; a bitch deserts her puppies or worries them, and all follow the unconquerable impulse to wander and to wound living beings. The victim will sometimes manifest incredible strength in breaking his chain and scaling high walls. Twitchings of the muscles of the face, and even general convulsions, are sometimes seen. Food is usually rejected, or if swallowed is soon vomited. In the course of two or three days the furious stage merges into the paralytic one, first shown by paresis of the hind extremities and a swaying motion in walking, then by paralysis of the lower jaw, which hangs pendent and allows the escape of a viscid saliva. The palsy gradually extends over the whole body—a sure precursor of approaching death, which is rarely delayed beyond eight days, and never more than ten, from the onset. In this last stage the animal has become extremely emaciated, with dry withered hair, hollow flanks, and small weak pulse; he may at first rise on his fore limbs when disturbed, and even attempt to snap, but there is now little danger of a bite. Convulsions may alternate with the paralysis. The result is invariably fatal.

The peculiarity of dumb or paralytic rabies in dogs is that the last or paralytic stage supervenes at once on the prodromata, without any intervening period of acute delirium and fury. The animal is throughout dull, quiet, and depressed, and shows little tendency to bite, to wander, or to restless movement. The excitement of the sexual passion is the same as in the furious forms, and the howl is still emitted, though much more rarely. Soon the lower jaw drops from paralysis, allowing the saliva to drivel from the mouth, and the animal can only succeed in closing it momentarily under the greatest provocation to bite. Paralysis of the hind limbs and of the whole body speedily follows, and death ensues in from two to three days. As soon as the jaw is paralyzed the subject is unable to drink, eat, bite, or bark, and emaciation advances with extraordinary rapidity.

The lethargic or tranquil form of rabies in dogs is manifested neither by furious madness nor by palsy of the jaws, but the nervous prostration is shown in a profound lethargy and apathy. The patient curls himself up, and will not be roused by his master's voice, by any noise, disturbance, or even punishment; he makes no response to the caresses of his friends, and pays no attention to the food or drink they bring him, but remains in his place, growing daily more emaciated and lethargic, until relieved by death toward the tenth or fifteenth day of the illness.

Besides the three typical forms there are intermediate varieties, which are classed with one or other according as the symptoms of that type seem to predominate. The same virus, inoculated, will produce different types in separate individuals, the result seeming to depend more on the susceptibility of the subject than any special quality in the poison. With many notable exceptions it may be stated that, on the whole, furious rabies predominates in hounds, bull-dogs, and other less domesticated or naturally vicious and courageous breeds, while the paralytic and tranquil types attack especially house and pet dogs.

POPULAR FALLACIES.—It is a dangerous delusion to suppose that mad dogs have a dread of water and polished surfaces, that they will not eat or drink, that they froth abundantly from the mouth, and that they run with the tail drooping between the hind limbs. There is no hydrophobia in the dog or other domestic animal. The rabid dog drinks freely in the early stages of the disease, lapping even his own urine; later, he still laps, and even plunges his nose in water, though often unable to swallow; and in his wanderings he swims rivers without the slightest reluctance. The appetite is not entirely lost, though greatly impaired and usually depraved, all sorts of unsuitable, noxious, and disgusting objects being picked up and swallowed with avidity. Frothing from the mouth is exceptional in rabies, and the flow of saliva is rarely seen unless when the jaw is paralyzed and pendent. Carrying the tail between the legs is a symptom of all diseases attended by abdominal pain, and is by no means constant in rabies. During the paroxysms the tail is usually carried erect.

Foxes, jackals, and badgers attacked by rabies lose their natural shyness, enter villages, follow and bite other animals and men, and, like rabid dogs, die in an unconscious and paralytic condition. Wolves are affected like foxes, but are more dangerous because of their power, the ferocity of their attack, and their habit of flying at the face and hands. Rabid cats are more retiring than dogs, and show less disposition to attack, but when they do, use both claws and teeth, and especially on bare portions of the body. The cry is hoarse like that emitted during the period of rut. They usually die about the third or fourth day.

The rabid horse is the subject of violent excitement, nervousness, and fear. There are trembling, loss of appetite, rubbing and eversion of the upper lip, neighing, sexual excitement, and inclination to bite and kick. Delirium may be suspected, but during the paroxysms the true nature of the disease is betrayed by the unconquerable desire to bite, kick, and otherwise injure those about him. He will even gnaw the manger and kick the stall to pieces, or lacerate his fore limbs and flanks with his teeth. In the early stages there is the same tendency to lick and rub the wound, which becomes red and irritable, the same red glaring or squinting eyes, and the same jerking of the muscles, as seen in the dog, and the affection winds up in the same way, in paralysis and death in four or five days.