28S DAbDS VETERINARY MLD1UINE AND SURGERY. 



Treatment. — The remedies are hand-rubbing, exercise, and stim- 

 ulating liniment. The best liniment fcr 'ocal dropsy of this char- 

 acter is as follows : 



No. 35. Fluid extract of wormwc :d 4 oz. 



Fluid extract of ginger. . . 3 oz. 



Spirits of camphor 1 pint. 



Rub the region of tumefaction with a portion of this linimenl 

 every night. 



When swelling of the limbs do not assume a periodical char- 

 acter, and suspicion of predisposition can not be entertained, then, 

 in addition to the application of the liniment, give the animal, 

 morning and evening, one ounce of the fluid extract of buchu. 



Scarlatina (Scarlet Fever). 



Scarlet fever, or scarletina, as it occurs among horses in th« 

 United States, is a febrile disease of a very prostrating character : 

 yet it is not considered by the author a contagious malady. Ii 

 has only lately, however, been recognized in this country as a dis- 

 tinct equine disease, and, being of rather rare occurrence, we know 

 but little about it. The cases that have come under the author's 

 treatment were unattended by ulceration of the throat, and this 

 may account for the non-contagion; for, in the human subject, 

 when ulceration of the throat takes place, the case becomes ma- 

 lignant. 



Watson says : " The malignant sort; throat may be caught 

 from a patient who has mild scarlet fever ; and mild scarlet fever 

 may, in like manner, be contracted from one who is suffering 

 under the malignant sore throat. The two forms graduate insen- 

 sibly, in different cases, toward each other ; and it would be im- 

 possible, even if it were desirable, to draw any strict line of 

 separation between them. Many would say, and probably with 

 truth, that the difference was this : in the one form, tL 3 poison of 

 the disorder is seeking its vent, principally, by the throat; in the 

 other, by the skin." It appears, therefore, that in the human 

 subject the disease is capable of being communicated at any stage. 



The cases that have come under the author's notice since he first 

 recognized the malady have all been of a mild form ; that is to 

 say, non-malignant. The limbs, sheath, and pectoral regions were 

 excessively dropsical ; the skin was the seat cf rash or minute <J< < 



