NOT DESCRIBED IN PREVIOUS SECTIONS. 477 



In cocoanut water it multiplies rapidly, producing a milky opacity of the 

 previously transparent fluid, an acid reaction, and an evolution of carbon 

 dioxide. 



On potato it produces a thick layer, which may cover the entire surface 

 in three or four days, and which has a dirty-white, cream- white, or pinkish- 

 white color and cream-like consistence. The growth upon potato varies at 

 different times, evidently owing to differences in the potato. 



When stained preparations are examined with the full light of the Abbe 

 condenser the ends of some of the rods appear to be cut away, leaving a con- 

 cave extremity ; but by using a small diaphragm to obtain definition it will 

 be seen that the cell wall extends beyond the stained portion of the rod and 

 includes what appears to be a vacuole. There is no reason to believe that 

 this appearance is due to the presence of an end spore, for the supposed 

 vacuole is not refractive, as a spore would be, and my experiments on the 

 thermal death-point of this bacillus indicate that it does not form spores. 

 Cultures are sterilized by exposure for ten minutes to a temperature of 160 

 F. (71.2 C.). 



Pathogenesis. Very pathogenic for rabbits when injected into the cavity 

 of the abdomen. Injections of a small quantity of a pure culture into the 

 ear vein or subcutaneously generally give a negative result. Injections of 

 from one to five cubic centimetres of a culture in bouillon, blood serum, or 

 agua coco, into the cavity of the abdomen, frequently prove fatal to rabbits 

 in a few hours two to six. 



The negative results obtained in injecting cultures beneath the skin or 

 into the ear vein of rabbits show that this bacillus does not induce a fatal 

 septicaemia in these animals, and the fatal result when injections are made 

 into the peritoneal cavity does not appear to be due to an invasion of the 

 blood, but rather to the local effect upon the peritoneum, together with the 

 toxic action of the chemical products resulting from its growth. 



It is true that I have always been able to recover the bacillus from the 

 liver, or from blood obtained from one of the cavities of the heart, even in 

 animals which succumb within a few hours to an injection made into the 

 cavity of the abdomen. But the direct examination of the blood shows that 

 the bacilli are present in very small numbers, and leads me to believe that 

 the bacillus does not multiply, to any considerable extent at least, in the 

 circulating fluid. 



The spleen is not enlarged, as is the case in anthrax, rabbit septicaemia, 

 and other diseases in which the pathogenic microorganism multiplies abun- 

 dantly in the blood. 



On the other hand, there is evidence of local inflammation in the peri- 

 toneal cavity. When death occurs within a few hours the peritoneum is 

 more or less hyperaemic and there is a considerable quantity of straw-colored 

 fluid in the cavity of tbe abdomen. When the animal lives for twenty 

 hours or more there is a decided peritonitis with a fibrinous exudation upon 

 the surface of the liver and intestine. Usually the liver, in animals which 

 die within twenty-four hours, is full of blood, rather soft, and dark in color. 

 In a single instance I found the liver to be of a light color and loaded with 

 fat. 



The rapidly fatal effect in those cases in which I have injected two or 

 more cubic centimetres of a culture into the cavity of the abdomen has led 

 me to suppose that death results from the toxic effects of a ptomaine con- 

 tained in the culture at the time of injection. The symptoms also give sup- 

 port to this supposition. The animal quickly becomes feeble and indisposed 

 to move, and some time before death lies helpless upon its side, breathing 

 regularly, but is too feeble to get up on its feet when disturbed. Death some- 

 times occurs in convulsions, but more frequently without apparently from 

 heart failure. 



Pathogenic also for guinea-pigs when injected into the cavity of the 

 abdomen, but death does not occur in so short a time eighteen to twenty 

 hours. Subcutaneous injections of one-half to one cubic centimetre gave a 



