464 Veterinary Medicine. 



fore, interferes with the integrity of the duodenal functions di- 

 rectly contributes to the extension of infection from bowel to- 

 liver. Old, heated, musty, cryptogamic, dusty fodder, grains 

 that have been badly harvested in wet seasons, feed that has been 

 damp and fermented, overloading of the stomach, irregular feed- 

 ing and watering, giving drink after a feed of grain, under- 

 feeding, overwork, worms, excessive fatigue, damp, dark stables, 

 etc. , tend to induce indigestions and to lay the bile ducts open tO' 

 infection. Blocking of the bile duct and stasis of its contents- 

 may be a sufficient cause. The .swollen mucosa around the orifice 

 of the duct not only blocks the pas.sage but favors the formation 

 of a mucous plug as recorded by Benjamin of an equine patient. 

 Wolff found obstruction of the duodenum in the horse by a mass- 

 of ingesta, and blocking of the gall duct, with jaundice. 



Gall stones and concretions are very direct causes of biliary ob- 

 struction and jaundice. Though less common in horses than 

 cattle, the-se are not unknown in idle, pampered animals when on 

 dry winter feeding. 



Tumors of the pancreas or adjacent organs pressing on the gall 

 fluct are recognized as causes of equine icterus, (Megnin, Nocard). 



With any obstruction to the bile a disturbance of balance of 

 pres,sure between the bile ducts and the hepatic veins is brought 

 about by respiratory movements. On the one hand the aspira- 

 tory power of the chest empties the hepatic veins, lessening blood 

 pre-ssure, and in expiration the contraction of diaphragm and ab- 

 dominal muscles compresses the gall ducts increasing their tension 

 and favoring absorption of bile. 



The entrance into the bile duct of the ascaris megalocephala is- 

 at once a cause of ob.struction and of the transference of duodenal 

 microbes, and the presence of trematodes (fasciola hepatica, or 

 distoma lauceolatum) will also favor obstruction. Other para- 

 sites, like the echinococcus or actinomycosis, may press on the 

 biliary ducts and determine jaundice. 



Another mode of infection is by way of the portal vein, the 

 microbes entering from the intestine and becoming arrested and 

 colonized in the liver (Dieckerhoff). 



Whether from the presence of the microbes or from the absorp- 

 tion of ptomaines and toxins from the intestines, the radical 

 biliary ducts become inflamed, swollen, and even blocked, and 



