258 



INFECTIVE DISEASES. 



recovevy, and in about fourteen days by another attack of fever, 

 which may be repeated after another week. 



Starvation, in association with overcrowding and filth, is intimately 

 connected with the causation of the disease. The subjec^ts of the 

 disease contaminate the air around them, and the virus is principally 

 conveyed by tramps raid dirty people. 



Obermeier discovered spirilla in the blood during the paroxysms 

 of fever. The constant occurrence of the spirillum in relajjsing 

 fever, and the fact of its not being found in any other conditions, 

 render it ^ery probable that it is the cause of the disease. 



#^# "^^ ^ .\y] 





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Fig. 124. — SpiKn.LUM Obekmeieki ik Blood op Monkey Inoculated with 

 Spirilla aftek Removal of the Spleen (Soudakewitch). 



Spirillum Obermeieri (Sjm-ochceta Obermeieri, Cohn). — 

 Threads similar to the Spirillum plicatile. In length they are mostly 

 16 to 40 fjL, with regular screw-curves. They move very rapidly, 

 and exhibit peculiai- wave-Uke undulations. They are absent from 

 the blood during the non-febrile intervals, but are found in the 

 interior of leucocj'tes in the spleen. In blood serum and 50 per 

 cent, salt solution, they preserve their movements. In cover-glass 

 preparations they are readily stained by any of the aniline dyes, 

 and in sections, by preference, -with Bismarck brown. They are not 



