62 Veterinary Medicine. 



cases are difficult of diagnosis, though a fair inference may be 

 deduced from the extreme severity of the symptoms, and the un- 

 usual degree of prostration which is present. When a pharyngeal 

 speculum, passing through the nose, can be availed of, it may 

 become possible to reach a more definite conclusion. 



Treatment. Beside the measures advi.sed for catarrhal pharyn- 

 gitis (poultice, counter-irritants, laxatives, antithermics, alkalies, 

 etc.), the main reliance must be placed on antiseptics. Persistent 

 inhalations of warm water vapor with carbolic acid, creolin, tar, 

 lysol, camphor or sulphurous acid are in order : also a mixture of 

 one or other of these agents or of boric acid, bisulphite of soda, or 

 salicylic acid in honey or molasses to be frequently smeared on 

 the teeth. One of the best agents is the saturated solution of 

 chlorate of potash in tincture of muriate of iron, of which a 

 drachm may be added to three ounces of water and given every 

 hour or two. Calomel may be injected through the nose during 

 inspiration, by means of an insufflator, care being taken not to 

 exceed the physiological dose. 



PSEUDOMEMBRANOUS PHARYNGITIS IN CATTLE. 



Most common in calves. Inoculations successful on rabbits, mice and 

 sheep. Bacillus : its cultural characteristics. Predisposing cavises. Symp- 

 toms : nasal mucosa congested ; false membranes ; snuffling, wheezing 

 breathing; painful, rattling cough ; agonized expression ; salivation; bowel 

 disorder. Course. Duration. Lesions ; intense congestion and false mem- 

 branes. Treatment : as for horse ; special antiseptics ; solvents ; anodynes; 

 tracheotomy. 



This has appeared especially in calves, and though apparently 

 readily transmLsisible among the young, it rarely attacks aged 

 cattle. Cadeac and others inoculated it on guinea pigs and rab- 

 bits without success. Dammann, on the other hand, had, his 

 inoculated rabbits die in twenty-four hours with hemorrhages in 

 the seat of inoculation. Loffler inoculated it hypodermically on 

 mice and produced extensive infiltration of the entire walls of the 

 abdomen, and often of the peritoneum including the surface of 

 the liver, kidneys and intestines, on which was formed a thick. 



