SYMPTOM A TIC ANTHRAX. 249 



oval spores are found ; by their presence they distort the 

 bacilli in which they occur, causing them to assume a 

 spindle shape (clostridium), or, when two are united and 

 a spore occupies one of them, a drumstick shape. In- 



FIG. 70. Bacillus of symptomatic anthrax, containing spores, from an agar- 

 agar culture; x 1000 (Frankel and Pfeiffer). 



volution-forms are exceedingly common in old cul- 

 tures, and are of enormous size and of granular appear- 

 ance. 



The bacillus can be stained with the ordinary aqueous 

 solutions of the anilin dyes, but will not retain the color 

 by Gram's method or Weigert's fibrin method. It can 

 be colored in sections of tissue with Loffler's solution, 

 and can be observed in the blood without staining shortly 

 after death. 



The spores, which can be stained by ordinary methods, 

 are quite resistant to the action of heat and disinfect- 

 ants, and withstand the effects of drying for a consider- 

 able length of time. 



The bacillus of symptomatic anthrax (Fig. 71) is a 

 strictly anaerobic, parasitic bacterium. It grows at tem- 

 peratures above 18 C., but best at 37 C. 



